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New Patient Reading List

Forums General Melanoma Community New Patient Reading List

  • Post
    ThatHomeschoolDad
    Participant

      I'm not talking about studies — that's another topic and then some.  I mean articles, online or print, that should be in the Welcome Basket for any new OM patient.  What must-reads have you found?  I'll start us off:

       

      CURE Today article on super survivors, that is, "terminal" patients who are re-writing the odds.  Does not discuss OM, but useful anyway:

      http://www.curetoday.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/article.show/id/2/article_id/1463

       

      I'm not talking about studies — that's another topic and then some.  I mean articles, online or print, that should be in the Welcome Basket for any new OM patient.  What must-reads have you found?  I'll start us off:

       

      CURE Today article on super survivors, that is, "terminal" patients who are re-writing the odds.  Does not discuss OM, but useful anyway:

      http://www.curetoday.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/article.show/id/2/article_id/1463

       

      The Median Isn't the Message, the smartest, most thoughtful essay ever on statistics. A must for anyone Googling their disease.  Should be a laminated handout in every oncologist's office:

      http://www.cancerguide.org/median_not_msg.htm

       

      Postcards From Beyond the Zero, another great one from CancerGuide.org's Statistics section.  Actually, the whole Statistics section is a must-read:

      http://www.cancerguide.org/postcardsfbz.html

    Viewing 14 reply threads
    • Replies
        ThatHomeschoolDad
        Participant

          Yeah, the Median Isn't the Message link doesn't work because I missed the last letter when cuttin' – n-pastin'.  Here it is:

           

          http://www.cancerguide.org/median_not_msg.html

           

           

          –Tom

          ThatHomeschoolDad
          Participant

            Yeah, the Median Isn't the Message link doesn't work because I missed the last letter when cuttin' – n-pastin'.  Here it is:

             

            http://www.cancerguide.org/median_not_msg.html

             

             

            –Tom

            ThatHomeschoolDad
            Participant

              Yeah, the Median Isn't the Message link doesn't work because I missed the last letter when cuttin' – n-pastin'.  Here it is:

               

              http://www.cancerguide.org/median_not_msg.html

               

               

              –Tom

              RobC
              Participant

                Thanks for these too Tom – will check them out

                R

                RobC
                Participant

                  Thanks for these too Tom – will check them out

                  R

                  RobC
                  Participant

                    Thanks for these too Tom – will check them out

                    R

                    ThatHomeschoolDad
                    Participant

                      I read a LOT in the beginning, but only a few titles stick out.  It was a mistake to pluck Bernie Siegel's Love, Medicine & Miracles off the shelf when I did.  While I like some of what Bernie writes, his core idea, that patients can significantly affect the course of their disease with the right mental approach, or worse, that we had a role in developing our own cancer, is just about the last thing a new patient needs to read.  His theories, similar to those of O. Carl Simonton, sound great, but can also lead to unwarranted patient guilt, which helps no one.  Siegel and Simonton have also both walked back their claims in light of more recent clinical evidence.  So would I recommend their work?  If you're looking to add another view to a broader perspective on cancer, then sure, no harm;  if you're in those early desperate days or weeks post-diagnosis, then no, you will not find much comfort, so what's the point?

                      Instead, go get The Human Side of Cancer: Living with Hope, Coping with Uncertainty, by Jimmie Holland, who founded the psychiatric oncology service at Memorial Sloan Kettering, and is a pioneer in the field.  I haven't met Dr. Holland, but those who have say she is just as awesome as her book.

                      For those looking for a bit more specific techniques, Learned Optimism by Martin Seligman is quite practical, and quite appropriate for the cancer survivor.  To dive a bit deeper, I like some of Eckart Tolle's work.  Listening to his Power of Now as an audiobook was alternately enlightening and sleep-inducing, so it can serve two purposes when used judiciously.  Tolle echoes some of the tenets of mindfulness, which, at least to an amateur like me, is in the same family tree as Zen Buddhism.  How deep you wish to dive into that end of the pool is a matter of choice, and the level of prescription SSRI's in your system at any one time.  I've found both useful.

                      Cookbooks can be great, since food gives you at least one hand on the wheel when your ship seems to be stuck in the vortex of doom.  My go-to source has been The New American Plate Cookbook by the American Institute for Cancer Research.  My copy is so worn, the spine is braced with packing tape.  AICR also has a nifty newsletter, and you can sign up for regular email recipes — all good stuff.  The Cancer Lifeline Cookbook by Kimberly Mathai is very much a worthy addition to AICR, especially for patients working thought treatment side effects.  Plus, there isn't much overlap between the two books.

                      Following new recipes and tracking down ingredients is a welcome diversion, and making something to actually put inside your body is super way for lay people to self-medicate without the risk of accidental toxicity.  Granted, I can not endorse weaving through traffic, white-knuckled and crazed, screaming "Get our of my way you #$@&!, I have to find organic MINT!"  However, few oncologists could argue that trading an obsession with your untimely demise for an obsession for eating well is actually a bad thing.  Just don't become the food Nazi who slaps Doritos from strangers' hands.

                       

                      –Tom

                        paperdetective
                        Participant

                          If you want to learn about coping from clinical psychologists who have had ample experience with helping cancer patients, this is your book:

                          Oxford Guide to CBT for People with Cancer (Oxford Guides to Cognitive Behavioural Therapy) – 2012
                          by Stirling Moorey and Steven Greer
                          http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-People-Cognitive-Behavioural-Therapy/dp/0199605807/ref=dp_ob_title_bk

                          Note that it is a bit scholarly as it was meant for their colleagues, but still a gem of a book, even if you get half of its content.

                          This is totally science-based and results-proven knowledge and teaches that we can are perfectly capable to train our minds for this unusual situation.

                          paperdetective
                          Participant

                            If you want to learn about coping from clinical psychologists who have had ample experience with helping cancer patients, this is your book:

                            Oxford Guide to CBT for People with Cancer (Oxford Guides to Cognitive Behavioural Therapy) – 2012
                            by Stirling Moorey and Steven Greer
                            http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-People-Cognitive-Behavioural-Therapy/dp/0199605807/ref=dp_ob_title_bk

                            Note that it is a bit scholarly as it was meant for their colleagues, but still a gem of a book, even if you get half of its content.

                            This is totally science-based and results-proven knowledge and teaches that we can are perfectly capable to train our minds for this unusual situation.

                            paperdetective
                            Participant

                              If you want to learn about coping from clinical psychologists who have had ample experience with helping cancer patients, this is your book:

                              Oxford Guide to CBT for People with Cancer (Oxford Guides to Cognitive Behavioural Therapy) – 2012
                              by Stirling Moorey and Steven Greer
                              http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-People-Cognitive-Behavioural-Therapy/dp/0199605807/ref=dp_ob_title_bk

                              Note that it is a bit scholarly as it was meant for their colleagues, but still a gem of a book, even if you get half of its content.

                              This is totally science-based and results-proven knowledge and teaches that we can are perfectly capable to train our minds for this unusual situation.

                              RobC
                              Participant

                                thanks for the reading list Tom, i have ordered from a well-known online bookstore and look forward to getting into this stuff, esp the Learned Optimism – instinctively I feel this could be very helpful. Will report back!

                                Best, Rob

                                RobC
                                Participant

                                  thanks for the reading list Tom, i have ordered from a well-known online bookstore and look forward to getting into this stuff, esp the Learned Optimism – instinctively I feel this could be very helpful. Will report back!

                                  Best, Rob

                                  RobC
                                  Participant

                                    thanks for the reading list Tom, i have ordered from a well-known online bookstore and look forward to getting into this stuff, esp the Learned Optimism – instinctively I feel this could be very helpful. Will report back!

                                    Best, Rob

                                  ThatHomeschoolDad
                                  Participant

                                    I read a LOT in the beginning, but only a few titles stick out.  It was a mistake to pluck Bernie Siegel's Love, Medicine & Miracles off the shelf when I did.  While I like some of what Bernie writes, his core idea, that patients can significantly affect the course of their disease with the right mental approach, or worse, that we had a role in developing our own cancer, is just about the last thing a new patient needs to read.  His theories, similar to those of O. Carl Simonton, sound great, but can also lead to unwarranted patient guilt, which helps no one.  Siegel and Simonton have also both walked back their claims in light of more recent clinical evidence.  So would I recommend their work?  If you're looking to add another view to a broader perspective on cancer, then sure, no harm;  if you're in those early desperate days or weeks post-diagnosis, then no, you will not find much comfort, so what's the point?

                                    Instead, go get The Human Side of Cancer: Living with Hope, Coping with Uncertainty, by Jimmie Holland, who founded the psychiatric oncology service at Memorial Sloan Kettering, and is a pioneer in the field.  I haven't met Dr. Holland, but those who have say she is just as awesome as her book.

                                    For those looking for a bit more specific techniques, Learned Optimism by Martin Seligman is quite practical, and quite appropriate for the cancer survivor.  To dive a bit deeper, I like some of Eckart Tolle's work.  Listening to his Power of Now as an audiobook was alternately enlightening and sleep-inducing, so it can serve two purposes when used judiciously.  Tolle echoes some of the tenets of mindfulness, which, at least to an amateur like me, is in the same family tree as Zen Buddhism.  How deep you wish to dive into that end of the pool is a matter of choice, and the level of prescription SSRI's in your system at any one time.  I've found both useful.

                                    Cookbooks can be great, since food gives you at least one hand on the wheel when your ship seems to be stuck in the vortex of doom.  My go-to source has been The New American Plate Cookbook by the American Institute for Cancer Research.  My copy is so worn, the spine is braced with packing tape.  AICR also has a nifty newsletter, and you can sign up for regular email recipes — all good stuff.  The Cancer Lifeline Cookbook by Kimberly Mathai is very much a worthy addition to AICR, especially for patients working thought treatment side effects.  Plus, there isn't much overlap between the two books.

                                    Following new recipes and tracking down ingredients is a welcome diversion, and making something to actually put inside your body is super way for lay people to self-medicate without the risk of accidental toxicity.  Granted, I can not endorse weaving through traffic, white-knuckled and crazed, screaming "Get our of my way you #$@&!, I have to find organic MINT!"  However, few oncologists could argue that trading an obsession with your untimely demise for an obsession for eating well is actually a bad thing.  Just don't become the food Nazi who slaps Doritos from strangers' hands.

                                     

                                    –Tom

                                    ThatHomeschoolDad
                                    Participant

                                      I read a LOT in the beginning, but only a few titles stick out.  It was a mistake to pluck Bernie Siegel's Love, Medicine & Miracles off the shelf when I did.  While I like some of what Bernie writes, his core idea, that patients can significantly affect the course of their disease with the right mental approach, or worse, that we had a role in developing our own cancer, is just about the last thing a new patient needs to read.  His theories, similar to those of O. Carl Simonton, sound great, but can also lead to unwarranted patient guilt, which helps no one.  Siegel and Simonton have also both walked back their claims in light of more recent clinical evidence.  So would I recommend their work?  If you're looking to add another view to a broader perspective on cancer, then sure, no harm;  if you're in those early desperate days or weeks post-diagnosis, then no, you will not find much comfort, so what's the point?

                                      Instead, go get The Human Side of Cancer: Living with Hope, Coping with Uncertainty, by Jimmie Holland, who founded the psychiatric oncology service at Memorial Sloan Kettering, and is a pioneer in the field.  I haven't met Dr. Holland, but those who have say she is just as awesome as her book.

                                      For those looking for a bit more specific techniques, Learned Optimism by Martin Seligman is quite practical, and quite appropriate for the cancer survivor.  To dive a bit deeper, I like some of Eckart Tolle's work.  Listening to his Power of Now as an audiobook was alternately enlightening and sleep-inducing, so it can serve two purposes when used judiciously.  Tolle echoes some of the tenets of mindfulness, which, at least to an amateur like me, is in the same family tree as Zen Buddhism.  How deep you wish to dive into that end of the pool is a matter of choice, and the level of prescription SSRI's in your system at any one time.  I've found both useful.

                                      Cookbooks can be great, since food gives you at least one hand on the wheel when your ship seems to be stuck in the vortex of doom.  My go-to source has been The New American Plate Cookbook by the American Institute for Cancer Research.  My copy is so worn, the spine is braced with packing tape.  AICR also has a nifty newsletter, and you can sign up for regular email recipes — all good stuff.  The Cancer Lifeline Cookbook by Kimberly Mathai is very much a worthy addition to AICR, especially for patients working thought treatment side effects.  Plus, there isn't much overlap between the two books.

                                      Following new recipes and tracking down ingredients is a welcome diversion, and making something to actually put inside your body is super way for lay people to self-medicate without the risk of accidental toxicity.  Granted, I can not endorse weaving through traffic, white-knuckled and crazed, screaming "Get our of my way you #$@&!, I have to find organic MINT!"  However, few oncologists could argue that trading an obsession with your untimely demise for an obsession for eating well is actually a bad thing.  Just don't become the food Nazi who slaps Doritos from strangers' hands.

                                       

                                      –Tom

                                      paperdetective
                                      Participant

                                        Thanks for posting. The curetoday article is very inspiring.

                                        paperdetective
                                        Participant

                                          Thanks for posting. The curetoday article is very inspiring.

                                          paperdetective
                                          Participant

                                            Thanks for posting. The curetoday article is very inspiring.

                                            eyecancerny
                                            Participant

                                              Thanks for the list.  Will definitely look into some of them.  I also like Anti-Cancer, by David Servan Schrieber

                                               

                                              Best,

                                              Anne Marie

                                                ThatHomeschoolDad
                                                Participant

                                                  Yeah, Anti-Cancer was good.  I listened to it as an aufio book while in islolation post-plaque, then went out and got the hardback to pick up all that I forgot.  I also listened to Tolle's "Power of Now," as read by the author, which made it a great non-prescription sedative.  I do like Tolle's stuff, but as an orator?   Damn, dude…

                                                  –Tom

                                                  ThatHomeschoolDad
                                                  Participant

                                                    Yeah, Anti-Cancer was good.  I listened to it as an aufio book while in islolation post-plaque, then went out and got the hardback to pick up all that I forgot.  I also listened to Tolle's "Power of Now," as read by the author, which made it a great non-prescription sedative.  I do like Tolle's stuff, but as an orator?   Damn, dude…

                                                    –Tom

                                                    ThatHomeschoolDad
                                                    Participant

                                                      Yeah, Anti-Cancer was good.  I listened to it as an aufio book while in islolation post-plaque, then went out and got the hardback to pick up all that I forgot.  I also listened to Tolle's "Power of Now," as read by the author, which made it a great non-prescription sedative.  I do like Tolle's stuff, but as an orator?   Damn, dude…

                                                      –Tom

                                                    eyecancerny
                                                    Participant

                                                      Thanks for the list.  Will definitely look into some of them.  I also like Anti-Cancer, by David Servan Schrieber

                                                       

                                                      Best,

                                                      Anne Marie

                                                      eyecancerny
                                                      Participant

                                                        Thanks for the list.  Will definitely look into some of them.  I also like Anti-Cancer, by David Servan Schrieber

                                                         

                                                        Best,

                                                        Anne Marie

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