Slightly strange topic - online dating with cancer

Hi

This is a weird one but if you have any thoughts I would be grateful to know them.  I was thinking about maybe joining a dating website (not entirely to do with romance although if that came along great but as much for company etc), but wondered whether anyone knows of a dating website for people who have cancer.  Not so I can spend all my days chatting about cancer with one specific person (who might also have cancer) but more so once the "C" topic comes along you know they might already be prepared for it and will not disappear asap!

any replies very gratefully welcomed

thank you

Bubbles11

  • Morning.......

    I have GBM4, grade 4 Brain Tumour. It probably would take me a week to talk about my "LIFE". I would like to talk/become a friend/partner of someone who needs SUPPORT. I was diagnosed 10/9/17, and I love my "LIFE". Why? I'm alive..... I have started YouTube with this ...... GBM4 - "UNIQUE LIFE". Why? I need to talk about my "LIFE", my psychology degree has helped A LOT, and I NEED FUN IN MY "LIFE"......... 

    Be happy everyone, we will never get today back...... 

  • Hi Bubbles 

    hope you are well

    After I was diagnosed with Prostate Cancer and had it removed (all clear) I finished a relationship as I could see how hard it was for partner at the time. She was great at the time before the op coming to appointments and supporting me but I didn't want it to end up bitter, we are still good friends.

    so after I looked at dating sites and if any were specific for cancer patients and there were none, so I thought about setting one up and I went to nearly everyone but they turned me down.

    I don't think it's a slightly strange topic, I do feel it still has legs. 

     

  • Candate

    I agree I think it is something which could work.

    From my point of view it is avoiding that agonising conversation with someone who has never had cancer about why my body does not look as it did (right breast mastectomy, I am awaiting a reconstruction) - how do you explain it? I have no clue.

    I think I have managed to develop a slightly "ice maiden" image now which is the opposite of what I used to be like because I guess I subconsciously sabotage any potentially romantic opportunity before it gets anywhere near these kind of honest conversations..........................

  • Hi bubbles,

    Yes strange topic indeed. I was married for nealy 34 years,  A month shy of our 34th wedding anniversay before my wife was take away by bowel cancer in July 2020. I'm 60 years old and have liver cancer. I know what my outcome will be within  the next couple of years.  I was holding her hand when she died, and I know I'll be holding it again soon.

     

  • blobs

    So sorry to hear about your wife.  And also about your liver cancer.

    I hope the coming years are gentle with you.   34 years is an amazing length for a marriage - really quite rare now-a-days.  I admire you.  (I was married for 14 years which is a tiny duration in comparison).

    Wishing you well 

    Bubbles

  • Hi Mud great to hear your story and your moving forward in your life, it's so hard and sometimes a feeling of emptiness would love to chat my names Heather breast cancer survivor of 22 years now bowel cancer awaiting to see if the treatment has worked

  • Hello all, this topic is important to me. My husband reacted badly to my stage 4 diagnosis, couldn't cope, so now I have ended up on my own. I am stable right now so might have a while so would love to think I could have a new partner some time. But who would start a relationship with someone with a stage 4 diagnosis?? Its surely only the existing spouse who you hope would be able to support in that situation (sadly not in my case). Not that I need physical support right now and hopefully not for a while. And I would like to think I have something to offer but it's hard to believe that. I found a site called Cancer match (US based) buy it's not that I only want to meet someone with cancer, just someone who could cope with it and understand. Amy thoughts of how I could make progress? I'd like to be able to be honest about my health at the start but I fear putting someone off!

  • Hi I'll not say to much, but [@mare]‍  had same problem and after a few years just got married again.

    Hoping she will pop on to talk, and you can read about her yourself.

    i met my darling wife after she was run over bye a lorry she had broken and crushed leg smashed pelvis and fingers,a year later she had gangrene of the bowl so another operation and scar,i met her before her last op, and we've been married 50years this December.

    i now have cancer"palative care", my darling wife has Alzheimer's and Parkinson's plus other problems, but we are still happy together, my point is there is someone out there for you despite scars and I hope you find him or he finds you first.

    Good luck with your future .

    Best wishes keep positive.

    Billy

  • Hello everyone,

    And hello Billy! Thank you for drawing my attention to this thread.

    I have read all your posts on here. Please take heart that the generous soul that you hope to find friendship and companionship with will not run a million miles when you tell them of your cancer journey. It really isn't worth wasting precious time on those who do run, nor is it ever fair to blame them either - everyone has limits and living with cancer is a huge challenge for anyone isn't it?

     "Putting myself out there" was definitely an interesting time for me. I was lucky to have a teenage daughter who wisely advised me to start loving myself before I started looking for a partner. I was entirely devastated as my husband of many years suddenly left about a year after my Stage 4 diagnosis. People kept saying "You'll get over it in time".

    I just wanted to lash out and say "With my cancer diagnosis "time" is something I may not have!!!" I was so cross about everything and entirely devastated. So very unhappy that I had been left to cope with everything on my own. Depression was always round the corner. It was so hard to keep going.

    Skipping nine years on, I am still here despite the cancer (IDC) through my lungs and liver. And I met my new husband (we got married in September) six years ago after I had spent some of that precious time learning to value "me" again. We hit it off right from the start. And yes I met him on the internet. It is all a very long story. My children were always watchful of me and were like parents themselves telling me how to "stay safe" online. There were many hilarious moments, and I made loads of new friends, some of whom I still speak to now. My new partner found the whole cancer thing (especially my fear and panic) really tricky at times, but he has stuck beside me this past 6 years; he is the kindest person I know. We are best friends.

    There really are some fabulous people out there! And I found it easier to make friends (internet safety paramount) once I had stopped hurrying to find myself a partner. Although my rush was understandable (because I had a short prognosis) it was in fact the journey that was the important thing for me in the end. The journey, the friendships I made, and the realisation that I am ok on my own if I have to be (my mantra used to be "at least I know I will be there for me when I die - I will hold my own hand". I used to reassuringly squeeze my own knee on the way to oncology - I still do sometimes, hahaha, cos my husband is usually driving).

    Married life is good. And I am emotionally strong enough to handle it now I think.

    Sometimes the challenges life throws us can make us stronger can't they?

    Above all, the best thing I did was to take care of myself. The rest followed.

    I hope this helps?

    Thanks Billy, and you are absolutely one of those people who have risen to the challenges that you have been faced with. I think you're a very bright star.

    Love to you and all,

    Mary

    x

     

     

     

  • Lovely messages ... I'm on the other side of the table .... I've met an amazing man very recently via a dating site who has recently had all clear from oncologist for throat cancer.   I'm scared by it! But I think a lot of him already ...  He's been so open and honest. He has no salvia glands, and reduced swallow function and eats a very soft diet ... I'm a born feeder / hostess and struggling a little bit with this, as it's all gloopy food... I'm upsetting myself writing this as it sounds ridiculous but I don't know if I prepared for this ... as although he had the all clear he's dealing with ongoing effects of the treatment ... I've not met anyone like him before