When you’re first diagnosed with cancer, the world seems to spring into motion.
Suddenly, you have a nurse navigator. Appointments are made for you. Your phone rings with check-ins. Social workers appear with clipboards full of resources. The medical team seems to hold your hand every step of the way, from scheduling to scans, with a tone of urgency and compassion that makes you feel like the center of the universe — because you are. You have cancer. And everyone is ready to fight.
But if you live long enough to make it to Stage IV?
The hand-holding stops.
And it’s honestly kind of shocking.
Stage IV: Still Cancer, Somehow Treated Like Less
Let me be clear: Stage IV cancer is not an upgrade. It’s not a different game. It’s the same disease, just farther along. It comes with more complexity, more side effects, more emotions, more coordination — not less.
And yet, once you hit that label — metastatic, incurable, palliative — you become invisible to the very system that once felt like a lifeline.
No more navigator.
No more automatic scheduling. (Except with the Medical Oncologist, they are good about making sure you have your next appointment before you leave)
No more urgency.
No more empathy on tap.
Instead, you’re expected to be a pro at this.
You’ve had cancer before, right? You know how this goes.
So figure it out. Make your own appointments. Call back if you don’t hear anything. Coordinate between specialists. Wait in silence while doctors go on vacation.
And while you’re at it, try not to panic about the words “the lesions are growing.”
It’s Not Just Poor Communication — It’s Emotional Neglect
The emotional whiplash of going from “you’re in a fight and we’re all in it with you” to “we’ll call you… maybe” is real. And cruel.
At Stage IV, we are living with a terminal illness. That means every delay matters. Every appointment not made is time we don’t get back. Every brush-off or dropped ball adds to our fear and frustration.
We’re not new to cancer, but that doesn’t mean we don’t still need help — if anything, we need more.
The System Isn’t Built for Survivors — and That’s the Problem
The cancer care system is designed to walk people through a beginning-middle-end journey. Get in, get treated, get cured. If that doesn’t happen — if your cancer spreads, comes back, or never goes away — the system just… kind of drops you.
There’s no roadmap. No guidance. No hand to hold.
You’re not “curable,” so you’re not the focus.
But what they forget is: You’re still living. Still feeling. Still here.
And deserving of care that reflects that.
What We Need
We don’t need sympathy. We need structure.
We don’t need platitudes. We need people who call us back.
We don’t need miracle cures sent by well-meaning friends.
We need systems that treat us like we matter — even when we can’t be “fixed.”
Stage IV patients deserve the same dignity, coordination, and compassion as anyone newly diagnosed. Maybe more.
Because we’re not just “managing cancer.”
We’re managing life, death, emotions, relationships, fatigue, insurance, fear — and still trying to be human through all of it.
If you’re in the Stage IV club — and I’m so sorry if you are — just know:
You’re not wrong for feeling abandoned.
You’re not crazy for needing more help.
And you’re not alone.
We may have to fight harder to be heard. But our voices matter.
Especially now.
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