I doubt many know that my first dealing with health issues occurred  during adolescence.  When I was 14 I became ill with what we thought to  be the flu.  We realized that the diagnosis was incorrect when I didn't  quickly recover.  I remained sick for the next three years.
My  attendance at school was sporadic at best.  I was commonly absence for  months at a time as the doctors tried to find a diagnosis.  Finally,  after years of mental and physical pain, we discovered the culprit:  I  had contracted Lyme disease.  Unfortunately the disease went undiagnosed  which allowed it to spread neurologically.  Two bouts of IV  antibiotics, and several months later, I finally regained my strength to  return to school full time my senior year.
The teen years  are a difficult time to be struggling with illness.  I was isolated from  my peers and essentially "forgotten" by my circle of friends.  I  learned a lot through this experience, perhaps most valuable was the  importance of reaching out to others when they are struggling.  Being  sick is miserable, but being sick and forgotten is a pain that cannot be  described.
Perhaps understanding the importance of supportive  friends cannot be appreciated unless you have felt the isolation that  often accompanies an illness or life changing event.  I suspect that  avoidance of uncomfortable situations is human nature because it seems  to be the instinct of so many.  When somebody is diagnosed with cancer,  becomes ill, or loses a limb, friends and family often fade into the  background because they don't know what to say or how to react to the  situation.
I am often contacted by friends and family members of a  new amputee.  They want to know how to help, but they also want to know  what they shouldn't do.  They don't want to say or do the wrong thing  to make the situation worse.  Staying away and avoiding their loved one  is, by far, worse than saying or doing something "wrong."
Fear of offending the friend should never keep somebody from reaching  out.  A new amputee knows that they no longer have their limb.  It isn't  a topic that should be avoided out of a fear of causing pain.  I have  yet to meet a new amputee who doesn't have the need to talk about the  loss!  Sometimes having those "this really sucks" feelings validated by a  caring friend helps speed the healing process.
Whatever the  obstacle being faced by a friend, it is never wrong to reach out and  offer support.  Please don't assume that others are offering a caring  ear and words of encouragement.  I know from experience that there can  never be too much love and support during difficult times!

 
 
Well said.
ReplyDeleteso true! I take care of my terminally ill brother who at one time had a wife, kids and many friends. When his disease first started the ex-wife and his kids and friends swore they would always be there for him and me... well the kids show up on holiday's and when they are guilted or need money, and the friends made one visit this year as a group, spent a afternoon with promises to be back... that hasn't happened. It's so sad, I know these friends and family will be saying they wished they could have spent more time, or say how great my brother was or is on fb. I watch my brother wither away, trying to raise my children and help them to understand and hold down a full time job and take care of my brother, it's exhausting and so hard--it would be wonderful if one of those friends or his children would stop by and spend even a few min. a week with him before it's to late... sorry for the rant, this is a painful subject for me and the late hour and holidays make it worse.
ReplyDeleteI recognize a few things hrre. I had a colleague who was diagnosed with leukemia. I am not sure but quite certain that some of his "friends" avoided him. I didn't. We were good friends until he died a few years later.
ReplyDeleteAnd then there was this former neighbour who had been diagnosed with bone cancer. The doctor made some terrible mistakes before he made the correct diagnosis. This caused him to live through a lot of pain before he lost his leg... and his life soon afterwards because the cancer had spread to his lungs. But again I saw no reason to avoid him or the subject. And I will never be able to understand why some people do...
I recognize a few things hrre. I had a colleague who was diagnosed with leukemia. I am not sure but quite certain that some of his "friends" avoided him. I didn't. We were good friends until he died a few years later.
ReplyDeleteAnd then there was this former neighbour who had been diagnosed with bone cancer. The doctor made some terrible mistakes before he made the correct diagnosis. This caused him to live through a lot of pain before he lost his leg... and his life soon afterwards because the cancer had spread to his lungs. But again I saw no reason to avoid him or the subject. And I will never be able to understand why some people do...