When first diagnosed and in planning treatment one can usually rely upon support from partners, friends and family, as well as the numbness of shell shock, to get through the initial period. Most of us are pretty good for the short-term. Then the routine of hospital visits, coping with side effects and managing daily life sets in and friends and family, and even partners, are often less available, as what was acute usually moves into the chronic. Staying in for the long haul can be tough. It can be helpful to remember this whether you are carer or being cared for. Although support programs are increasingly available through the hospital and cancer organizations, both of us were very fortunate that key friends stepped in to organize formal care teams. They accompanied us to hospital visits when our partners were working, prepared meals and provided visits and emotional support to both us and our partners. This was extremely helpful but came with varying degrees of resistance. It seemed allowing others to care for us is sometimes hard to accept. We may view it as a weakness, imagine we are a burden, or not worthy of such attention; and yet we often have no trouble caring for those in need; and may even go out of our way to do so. We might well ask, why the double standard? We are so often, sooner or later in the same boat. Self-care in general is a struggle for those of us who are by nature care-givers whether personally and professionally (as we both are). And although allowing others to care for us is key part of a self-care plan (see Shelly Tygeilski’s 8-part series on Mindful Self-Care), it can be harder than being kind to ourselves. This is worth investigating because we are social creatures and relatedness is a key psychological need. We cannot have true intimacy without vulnerability, without at some point putting ourselves in the hands of another as they too will need to put themselves in the hands of someone else. Believe it or not, as an adult, it can actually bring a lot of ease when we let ourselves let go and can be taken care of. When we both had cancer, receiving meals from friends and family was a great relief, and allowed limited energy to be used for other purposes.
What your Early Attachment Style Says About How You Recieve Help
Clues to whether or not it is easy or difficult for us to care or be cared for may be found in attachment theory. Psychiatrists Robert Maunder and Jon Hunter have long researched how the stress of illness triggers early attachment styles formed by our infant relationships to primary caregivers. In their research and book (Love, Fear, and Health: How Our Attachments to Others Shape Health and Health Care. University of Toronto Press, 2015) they show how we all express varying attachment styles described as secure; preoccupied, anxious and security-seeking; self-reliant, avoidant and dismissive of support; and cautious, disorganized and fearful of support. Even those of us who are chiefly secure in our attachments have degrees of guilt, loss of control and loss of identity that offers of support may trigger when we are vulnerable. This may explain why allowing others to care for us can feel threatening. One of the primary lessons of mindfulness is that aging, illness and death come to all of us sooner or later. As Muriel Spark, the author of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, says: “It is difficult for people of advanced years to start remembering they must die. It is best to form the habit while young.” To death we would add aging and illness, and not only remembering but facing them with eyes open, grace, equanimity and self-care in all its facets.
Four Things to Remember When Others Want to Care For You
In allowing others to show their care for us it is important to consider the following: