The Blame Game
Moving past myriad rationales for cancer guilt.
By
Kathy LaTour
There were no pink ribbon lapel pins when I was diagnosed
with breast cancer in 1986 at the age of 37. No one
rushed up to offer their experience to help me cope.
In fact, the one person who did approach me at church
was an elderly lady who whispered, “I had the
operation too.”
“You mean a mastectomy,”
I said loudly. “I had a mastectomy.”
Friends treated me with concern at the unfairness of it all, asking
how they could help, and strangely, why I thought I got breast cancer.
What did I do, they wanted to know. That question hurt.
I know now they
were trying to distinguish themselves from me for emotional
safety. If they could say I got cancer because of something
I did—knowingly or
unknowingly—then they could breathe a sigh of relief because they hadn’t
done that.
It’s hard not to blame yourself when you’re
treated like someone with a communicable disease. And
cancer was new to my family. I was the first. It was
also the height of the “me” generation
when self-improvement was huge and there was constant
press about what was bad for you. At the time, a high-fat
diet was the latest cause of cancer in the popular
press (an idea that has been so back and forth, it
could be a self-propelled yo-yo).
So, I beat myself
up about all kinds of things—my diet, my weight,
French fries. But then logic took over. My diet, like
that of everyone else I knew, could use a makeover.
I had indulged in some very age-appropriate eating
habits during my college years and late 20s. But come
on! If fried food caused cancer, the Centers for Disease
Control would be researching East Texas, where the
word fried comes before most of the food groups. Now
it was getting laughable. Sometimes, we just don’t
know why we get cancer, but somehow everyone thinks
they know, and they want us to wear those labels so
it will be easy to see.
Society’s
Criticism
Labels lead to guilt, which
can be a huge burden for newly diagnosed patients because
it lurks around almost every turn. We feel guilt about
causing our cancer, about having our families go through
it, about not being able to do what we did before,
if only for a short time. Then there are the financial
burdens, and the list goes on. Particular guilt comes
with behaviors linked to cancer: smoking, sun overexposure,
a common sexually transmitted disease and obesity.
It’s not unusual to try and find an answer to
why cancer occurs, says Kymberley Bennett, PhD, assistant
professor of psychology at Indiana State University
in Terre Haute. “With any stressor, and cancer
is a big stressor, we try to figure out why it happened
to us,” she says. “Ultimately, we want
to try to identify something that we can, in turn,
control.”
And stressing about the cause of cancer
can lead to additional stress, says Dr. Bennett, who
recently led a study of 115 women newly diagnosed with
breast cancer that showed that those who blamed themselves
for their cancer showed higher levels of distress than
those who didn’t. The findings also suggested
that self-blame negatively affected a patient’s
ability to psychologically adjust throughout the year
following diagnosis.
Leann Rogers, LMSW, executive director
of Gilda’s
Club North Texas, says self-blame comes up a lot in
discussions with new members of the Dallas support
community. Despite evidence that what people do can
impact health, Rogers says it doesn’t do any
good to look back. “That kind of guilt becomes
a huge burden, and if people can’t find a way
to work through that and move forward instead of looking
back, it can be a big issue.”
For those who smoked
or sunbathed excessively, Rogers says it’s hard
to face the cause and effect, but people do have the
capability to stop blaming and judging themselves. “It’s
all about going forward. Not being stuck in the past.
You cannot change the past. Once a person gets that
and gets on their feet, they can move forward.”
When
Joyce Conroy of Milwaukie, Oregon, was diagnosed with
skin cancer in 2002, she found herself turning inward. “I
isolated myself from everybody because I didn’t
want to answer a bunch of questions about how I was
doing,” she says. In addition,
friends were making comments like, “I guess all
that time in the sun finally caught up with you, Joyce.”
Rachel
Sanborn, MD, an oncologist at Oregon Health & Science
University in Portland, says patients with guilt “see
this as their cross to bear, which is a barrier to
their getting optimal healthcare.” They may feel
guilty for using hospital resources or for asking a
family member to take off work to take them to their
treatment, she says. Like Conroy, they may not seek
social support.
In a recent study of 45 people with lung cancer, most
reported feeling stigmatized, whether they smoked,
never smoked or quit smoking years before their diagnosis.
Some patients even concealed their illness to avoid
the stigma attached to lung cancer and smoking. “In
this society, we’re very quick to place blame,” says
Dr. Sanborn. “Part of the reason is that we want
to think of ourselves as immune.”
Rogers attributes
it to our culture, which denies illness and has misconceptions
about cancer. Patients, she says, may feel guilt because
they can’t work
through chemotherapy or be the same productive person
they were before treatment. “We also live in
a death-denying culture. So anyone who perceives that
death will be the outcome doesn’t want that—they
want everything in a pretty package and for things
to get back to normal.”
Rogers encourages Gilda’s
Club members to work through the guilt before it becomes
depression, anger or even rage. “Guilt, like
the other negative emotions, is meant to be a guidepost
and should teach us something about the present. These
emotions are not meant to stick around.” But
mostly, Rogers says, guilt is a barrier to living your
life fully.
Letting
Go of Guilt
Cancer survivor Alastair Cunningham,
PhD, researches psychological well-being in cancer
patients at the Ontario Cancer Institute in Toronto.
He says people can benefit from addressing what’s
behind the guilt. “You feel illogically that
you are less of a person, less worthy than if you were
well. Try to shatter those notions,” he says.
“Counseling
helps,” says Dr. Sanborn, who recommends working
through guilt with a social worker or counselor. Other
options may include writing about feelings.
Rogers
says there needs to be a therapeutic setting for working
on these issues. “Once a person stops
looking back and stops questioning everything that
happened up to the cancer diagnosis, they can embrace
the fact that they are the same person and have a right
to exist in the world. Support groups are the great
place to do that because they are listening to other
survivors who have worked through the same issues.”
I
have decided humor is a good way to deal with my guilt.
So now when people ask me why I got breast cancer,
this is what I tell them: Since I am a college professor,
I consider not returning books to the library a real
sin. So I got cancer because of the book of William
Blake’s poetry that I checked out of the University
of Texas library in 1969 and kept on purpose.
It makes as much sense as any of the
other reasons people were offering me. By the way, if you’re
the librarian looking for that book, I did pay for it.
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