Today's post is from Karin Sieger, a BACP registered and accredited psychotherapist based in Richmond who specialises in supporting people affected by cancer (including family and friends) as well as other life changing health conditions. Karin is one of Yes to Life's Practitioner Supporters and we are grateful to her for sharing her expertise on our blog.
I thought cancer counselling was self indulgent and wouldn't help.
This is a common view about counselling and
therapy. People affected by cancer are no exception. What's the point in dwelling on it? It's too upsetting. Others are
worse off. It won't cure me.
Cancer like any other life-changing or
life-shortening illness impacts
everything in our lives - not just our bodies, but also our mental and
emotional well being, our relationships, our faith and values, our finances,
our future, our trust in our bodies and our trust in the world. This does not
stop when treatment ends. It is normal to feel like this and it makes sense.
A
cancer diagnosis throws our lives into one almighty crisis, which can
cause a whole range of emotional
responses, like fear, depression, anger, rage, loss and grief,
irritability, self pity, loneliness, guilt, resentment and hopelessness to
mention just some.
These
feelings can happen to all affected by cancer,
including relatives and friends. And these feelings can occur at every single
step along the way, from diagnosis, to treatment, to remission, to life with
and beyond cancer, whether the cancer is detected early or not, is curable or
not, is treatable or not, whether you are young or old, male or female, rich or
poor, fit or not, have faith or not. Cancer and cancer emotions do not
discriminate.
However, if we get stuck in these emotions, then life can become a lot more
bleak. Not attending to the emotional
trauma of cancer and cancer treatment can lead to long-term anxiety, depression
and stress. This in turn can impact our mental, emotion and physical well
being, our immune system and hormones, which in turn can impact treatment, and
our overall physical and emotional quality of life.
Talking about it can help take the lid off the pressure cooker before
it explodes. Talking in counselling and therapy is done in a way that is
safe and meaningful. It does not cure cancer, but it can heal other wounds,
which medical treatment often neglects and does not talk about.
It can help process the trauma, and put things into perspective in a way that
helps us realise that we have not lost all control of our lives, that we get
can and are entitled to play an active part in the life we have. We continue to
have choices and we are entitled to exercise them.
Talking
can make all the difference between passively
collapsing under the weight of overwhelming emotions, and actively taken charge
and facing up to what is happening.
In that sense talking has a valuable
contribution to make to an integrated
approach to our cancer experience and journey, which attends to body, mind
and soul.
Talking
is not self-indulging or a weakness. It takes
courage; yes, and energy, and it is the smart thing to do.
Karin
Sieger is a BACP registered and accredited psychotherapist and writer with a
private practice in Richmond, West London (visit her website to find out more). Karin has been treated for breast
cancer and explores living and dying in her blog Between Self and Doubt.
Would you like to join Karin in becoming a Practitioner Supporter? Please get in touch: office@yestolife.org.uk
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