
|Articles|June 27, 2016
False Cancer Reassurance Hurts
Author(s)Gregory Carroll, PhD
Dismissing or minimizing patients' doubts and worries can make them feel worse.
Advertisement
Please don’t tell me
you know I’ll be fine.
Wishing isn’t knowing.
The journey is mine.
Words, though meant to console,
pierce my heart, dull my mind
while soothing the source’s
emotional bind.
I can’t know for sure
what others may feel.
Their calm may be earnest,
their confidence real.
My speech is halting.
My joking feels lame.
Emotions collide,
camouflage the brain.
Restless, unsure
and numbingly slow,
my thoughts drift along
with my old self in tow.
The healing takes time,
a new normal I’m told.
The new part makes sense.
When does normal take hold?
Wishing isn’t knowing.
The journey is mine.
Please don’t tell me
you know I’ll be fine.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Trending on CURE
1
FDA Updates Safety Warnings for Common Chemotherapy Drugs
2
FDA Removes Use Limitation for Yescarta in Primary CNS Lymphoma
3
KTX-1001 Elicits Responses in Some With Multiple Myeloma
4
Real-World Data with Amtagvi Show High Response Rates in Advanced Melanoma
5




