Subject: You can definitely help your parents' friend.
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Posted on: 2010-05-10 15:56:00 UTC

Being in the hospital is one of the most tedious and unfamiliar things that can ever happen to somebody. If your friend is in the hospital (and most likely he will repeatedly be in the hospital), he's most likely going to be bored out of his skull, feeling more than a bit helpless, and generally uncomfortable.

I've been in the hospital (my longest time was only ten days, though), and I can tell you that when that happens, if you're even awake to see they're there, visitors are simply a lifesaver. They bring a bit of normality with them that seems to relieve the artificial environment of a hospital. The most annoying part of the whole experience is that you feel like you've lost control of your own life. Even the little things--like having your own comforter from your own bed--can make it a little more bearable. The most encouraging thing, I found, was to have people who simply treated me as a human being rather than a collection of symptoms (as the medical people so often did).

Most likely your friend will have times when he feels better, and times when he's able to come home and live pretty much normally (though probably he'll become tired a lot more easily). That's part of the point of cancer treatment--to increase quality of life, so that he can go about his business as unhindered by his illness as possible. Many people who live with cancer don't particularly want to put their lives on hold for it; so they learn that they can adjust things, get some help or get more creative (or both), and find ways to do what they want to do. People, in general, are rather resilient that way. An older lady in my church has been dealing with cancer for maybe five years; and she's pretty much the same as she's always been, except that she uses one of those powered scooters now so she won't get too exhausted.

Unfortunately, pancreatic cancer is one of the toughest types for modern medicine to deal with. Most likely your friend knows this already. But yes, people do occasionally recover even when doctors say they won't; and it's almost routine to hear of someone who gets five or even ten years when the doctors said he had only one. The human body is an amazingly complex system that we don't know everything about; and it's surprisingly good at returning to normal functioning even after something throws it way out of balance. I guess the bottom line is--it's a serious disease, so try not to fall into denial; but totally giving up hope isn't that logical either.

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