Today I wrote the following letter to the English newspaper, The Guardian. It was my response to an online article about whether it is appropriate or ethical for people with stage IV cancer to use social media to communicate about their illness. Lisa Bonchek Adams, a well known breast cancer blogger and communicator through other social media, was used as an example. I was angered by the article, the singling out of Lisa, and the many criticisms Lisa received in the comments section. The article can be found here. (Update: the article was removed by The Guardian who upon investigation removed it.) Lisa Bonchek Adams’ blog can be found here. Also see Nancy’s excellent essay at the Pink Underbelly. If you’d like to send your own letter it can be emailed to letters@theguardian.com.
My letter follows. I am skipping the use of block quotes because it makes the letter harder to read.
Dear Editor,
I am writing in response to Emma Keller’s article, which was published by you on 1/8/2014. The author used Lisa Bonchek Adams, who uses social media to communicate about her life with stage IV breast cancer, as an example of a possible unethical use of social media. I am angry about the journalist’s position as well as how the article stimulated a number of negative comments toward someone who needs no more negativity in her life. I have many objections to this piece and I will delineate a few of them here.
First, I believe in freedom of speech. I also believe in personal and professional responsibility. With all of the corruption and violence in the world, why target a mother of three with stage IV breast cancer, just for using social media to communicate about her experience with a horrible disease? This tact makes no sense at all to me.
I object to the characterization of Ms. Adams’ communication as “TMI”. Journalists cover natural disasters all of the time. They cover earthquakes, famine, hurricanes, and more. The photos and the written stories describe the devastation that people suffer. They describe the resilience and the heroism. Although not everyone is comfortable with the sadness of these stories, the stories are sympathetic and not considered TMI. Cancer is a kind of natural disaster. It is a disease that ravages and impacts countless numbers of people. Is it TMI because Ms. Adams is reporting on herself instead of being interviewed and photographed by “proper” journalists? If a hurricane survivor decided to get support and communicate about his/her experiences in dealing with a natural disaster, would we call this TMI? Would we as fellow human beings make so many negative comments about this person? I think not.
As a psychologist, I understand that distancing ourselves from an illness that can strike anyone, especially a young mother of three children, is a way we deal with the realities we don’t want to consider. They are too close. We can’t think about potential personal disaster every second of every day and function as healthy people. But it is also true that we can’t constantly deny the possibility of disaster and be healthy people. We have to incorporate potential malady into our lives. Understanding and accepting that bad things happen to good people is a building block of compassion. Without it, we let our own fear lead to unfairly assigning negative qualities to people, who are ill through no fault of their own, and doing their very best to manage under truly difficult circumstances.
As a breast cancer survivor, I understand how cancer has changed my life and my relationship with the outside world. I don’t know why I got breast cancer. I am a responsible person, a loving wife and mother, and a professional dedicated to improving the lives of children. I don’t know that I will have a recurrence. I am doing my best to live a healthy life but there is no guarantee that cancer, some other disease, violence, or an accident will end my life. I could say that it’s not fair that I got breast cancer and have had to endure its treatment, which even in this day and age, is brutal. Breast cancer, like a hurricane, is not fair. It is a natural disaster. People afflicted deserve compassion. We live with cancer and its threats in one way or another, every day.
I am also an active blogger about my own breast cancer experience. In doing so, I have enriched my life immeasurably in having made connections with wonderful people such as Ms. Adams. Having cancer is very isolating. It creates a juxtaposition of grief with a deep appreciation of the gift of life, which many people don’t understand. And there are aspects of breast cancer that make it particularly isolating. The breast cancer social media community is a very powerful network of women and men. I have drawn strength through the true friendships that I have made as well as the support of an amazing group of people, who live all over the world.
We will all die. Most of us do not know precisely when or how this will occur. People with stage IV cancer know that they are likely relatively near the end of their lives and that further they are likely to die from cancer. So many people with terminal disease spend their last years in isolation, even if when they are still able to work and carry out many daily responsibilities. Many of them don’t even “look sick” until much later in their disease progression. But their lives can be lonely and arduous. Social media can serve as a way for people to connect with others who understand. I have friends with stage IV breast cancer. I don’t know how much longer they will live or how much longer I will live. But I know that I will stay with them even through the cybersphere until our dying days. I so appreciate learning how to be a better friend to someone who is losing abilities while respecting their humanity and resilience. It is scary to know that I will likely lose more friends than I would have as a function of being part of the breast cancer community. But it is worse to think of us not having each other; there is real joy, love, and shared grief over the Internet. I consider it an honor to be trusted as a friend and to be relied upon to be there during the darkest times.
There are a lot of problems with our electronic age. Many products aimed at children, in particular, are harmful. There is nothing “virtual” about the breast cancer community. It is very real. Lisa Bonchek Adams is a real woman with real connections. This community is one of the very best and real things about our virtual age.
Thank you for your kind attention to my concerns.
Sincerely,
Elizabeth P. MacKenzie, Ph.D.
You ROCK!!! Elizabeth. Get ’em tiger!
Right back atcha, Sis!
Well done. Very well done.
Thank you. And thank you for raising this article to our attention. I found out through Knot Telling.
This is the best. I hope they listen!
Thanks so much, Mom.
So very well said!! Thank you.
Thank you for your kind words.
I was not aware of this article but am a follower of both you and Lisa Bonchek Adams. I am a breast cancer survivor and, like you, have made many virtual friends primarily through Facebook as I don’t have a blog. The support from these friends, who are mainly from USA and I live in New Zealand, is immeasurable. Although I am unlikely to meet them, knowing they are there and that they ‘get’ this disease and all that goes with it, has been a big part of my recovery process. I want to say “well said” for your letter to the editor. You have put my thoughts on paper and have my support. Cath
Thanks so much, Cath. I wish you the very best of health.
Oops, Cath. We have met before. I believe you lived in Seattle for a bit while your husband was finishing his medical training. So good to hear from you again!
Bravo Elizabeth!! Excellent post! It makes me so angry that someone would be critical of Lisa’s use of social media!! If you don’t like it, don’t read it!! Gezz!!! Thank you for writing to the editor. I wish we could all sign it with you.
Thanks so much!
dear Elizabeth,
this post and your letter to the Guardian was so well done. thank you for your excellent advocacy on behalf of Lisa and all cancer patients, and for shining a light on the truth of cancer being “a natural disaster”. brilliant.
much love and light,
Karen
Thank you, dear Karen. I hope you are well!
You hit the nail on the head, Elizabeth. Brilliant post. Your assertion that breast cancer is a natural disaster is a great analogy. I, too, am outraged at these so-called journalists’ attack on Lisa Bonchek Adams, as well as the online cancer community. We tell our stories, not to encourage voyeurism, but to share our experiences and feel less isolated. Thank you for a wonderful, insightful post.
Thank you, Beth. This story has gotten rather bizarre. This husband and wife team seems to be letting their personal lives cloud their judgment. And to use two major news outlets to do so is highly unprofessional. Why didn’t the editors stop these stories?
This shows there is a medical care ‘ism’ within journalism.. How sad that two individuals feel they need to condemn a mother who only wants to live.. It is ok for journalists to share a positive pink fluff image on a cancer journey where the hero (oncologist) saves the prince/princess (cancer patient), but what happens to the thousands of cancer patients that do not receive NED. Personally I am not prepared to fold the cards and allow this disease to have the last say in my life. And what this young women is trying to do like so many other bloggers is Paint C Out.. The reality is ups and downs.. doom and gloom.. tears and laughter.. To paint it as one way and the one that is palatable to the consumer is false representation of the truth..
Sarah, thank you so much for your thoughtful comment. I wish you the very best in your own health. I feel so badly for the attack on Lisa. I am encouraged by the outrage and I hope that she is getting so
Oops, I wasn’t finished! I hope that Lisa and other cancer patients are heartened by the support.
Used the link to read the article and found “This post has been removed pending investigation.” Sounds as if it was not a moment too soon!
Yes, indeed!
[…] Elizabeth shares the letter she wrote to the editor of The Guardian on her blog and makes the same point: […]
From one Elizabeth to another, very well done! Thank you!
Thank YOU!
With all the reaction and great posts, it seems what started as a negative, may be a positive. Way to go people!
Yay!
I didn’t see the article Elizabeth and am glad I didn’t because I read your letter and Knots and I already know whatever it said was fundamentally wrong. I think we should all talk even more openly about cancer, death, mental health and the various other topics that we have taken so very long to begin demystifying. The prospect of dying of cancer is one of the most horrific prospects anyone has to face. Being trapped (as a spirit/soul/sentient being) inside a body that is failing over a period of days, months or years is simply one of the most difficult things anyone could be expected to deal with. I believe people like Lisa who are courageous enough to share their experiences and offer out their humanity whilst facing the most inhuman situation deserve to be heard, respected and loved. Good on you for giving the Guardian what for xoxox
Thanks, Tracy! The article as well as a follow up article by her husband created an incredible stir.
[…] Nancy of The Pink Underbelly points out that “The reasons for blogging and tweeting are as varied as the cancer patients themselves”; Lauren writes of blogging as a therapeutic outlet: “For me, writing about my cancer was like letting the floodgates open and all those cooped up things that had been making a racket in my head were set free”; while on Telling Knots , a blog about living with Stage IV cancer, the author writes of the “social interaction that is made so difficult by our physical condition but is facilitated through the new media” – a point echoed in Elizabeth’s words: […]
[…] writing about this whole situation, including pieces by Nancy at the Pink Underbelly, Elizabeth at My Eyes Are Up Here, Renn at The Big C and Me, and Nancy at Nancy’s Point. Marie at Journeying Beyond Breast Cancer […]