How to Support a Cancer Patient
#yoorsmesrosa When there are people with cancer, it is very sad, since the family will be affected by the disease, and everyone who goes through this experience undergoes changes. Cancer treatment can be too stressful and distressing at times, but you can learn useful and creative ways to deal with the changes and uncertainty that you and your family will experience. Suddenly there will be no amount of time and energy available as before, but the role of parent is not something that can be postponed. Your children need you very much during these times, and you will continue to need to be a parent to your children while you are undergoing treatment, even if you don't feel ready to do so.
Children are guided with accurate and direct information, ways of seeing the current situation with an attitude of hope and healthy ways to deal with the situation. There will be times when your children won't listen, and when things don't turn out the way you expected. But being a parent implies that sometimes you will have to make decisions based on information you don't have completely, and sometimes you will make mistakes. In the words of Dr Wendy Harpham, who is also a mother suffering from cancer: “There is no right way to be a parent. Stop Trying to Be Perfect”.
Support groups can have many benefits.

Patients with this condition may feel stressed and overwhelmed. It's normal for them to feel anxious, scared, angry, or depressed. Cancer treatments can also cause them to have trouble concentrating or remembering things. These feelings and problems can make it difficult for them to work or do normal daily activities.