Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Who’s scared of the word ‘cancer’, Katie Hopkins? I am.

She should listen to the experiences of others before questioning why people are afraid

Emily Adams
Tuesday 11 March 2014 16:12 GMT
Comments
Stocks of the drug Herceptin are displayed in the satellite pharmacy at the Western General Hospital June 9, 2006 in Edinburgh, Scotland. The drug is to be made available on the NHS in Scotland for all women with early forms of breast cancer.
Stocks of the drug Herceptin are displayed in the satellite pharmacy at the Western General Hospital June 9, 2006 in Edinburgh, Scotland. The drug is to be made available on the NHS in Scotland for all women with early forms of breast cancer. (Getty Images)

A recent tweet by renowned loudmouth Katie Hopkins got me very riled up. Criticised for her outrageous views, (you know, the one who won’t let her kids play with Tyler or Chantelle) I must admit I follow her on Twitter to see what ridiculous nonsense she comes up with next. Most of it is easy to ignore, but recently something she said hit a nerve.

"In an age where we communicate constantly and talk all the time, we are still frightened of the word cancer. What are we so scared of?", tweeted Hopkins last week.

This is a matter very close to my heart, and if Hopkins wants to come out and ask why we are so scared of the word cancer, then she should at least listen to stories of families who have been affected.

When I was 17 and in my second year of college, my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer, an aggressive form that led to the most hellish year and a half of our lives. As a teenager who lived with her mum and only her mum, I suffered everything with her. Most people might have another parent to help them out, siblings at home to hold you when you’re scared, or a large family to comfort you when you want to give up. But for me, it was just me and my mum, the most important person in my life. I cannot put in to words how difficult, terrifying and heartbreaking that was.

Think back to the workload during your A-levels, your desperate attempts to get into a decent university to try and make your parents proud. Now imagine dealing with that while caring for a parent, trying to pass your driving test so you can take them to the hospital, cooking for them, seriously contemplating not going to university because they haven’t finished their treatment yet, looking after them after every operation, every round of chemotherapy and every other drug under the sun has been pumped through their body. Fun, right?

Two operations, 18 weeks of chemotherapy, four weeks of radiotherapy and a year of Herceptin and the emotional distress and physical scars to last a lifetime. You never fully recover from cancer. The word itself is loaded with negative connotations, and it honestly makes me nervous when I hear it or read it because I feel like it’s coming back to get us.

Even after going through it all with my mother and watching her finally get better, I am willing to stand up and admit that I am scared of the word cancer. Terrified, in fact, because it could always come back.

I am in no way fishing for sympathy. We got through it and my Mum is certainly a tougher person because of it. But I found the feeling of being completely powerless more painful than anything I have ever experienced. I know that anyone who has been in this situation will feel exactly the same, but sometimes it might just be too painful for them to talk about.

So actually Katie Hopkins, thank you, because if you hadn’t angered me so much, I wouldn’t have had the guts to write this.

What I want to know is: how can you not be scared?

A longer version of this post can be found here

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in