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Mar 1 2007, 1:10 PM EST (current) Anonymous 25 words added
Feb 20 2006, 7:47 PM EST wetpaint

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After our diagnosis, many of us will start attending prostate cancer support groups at the hospital where we received treatment. Some of us may also call upon social workers, clergy, counselors or clergy members for advice and solace. Most of us will turn to friends and family.

Building a support network
You can't--and shouldn't--go through this alone. Here are some things you can do to build up your support network.


Giving back

Then, once we've beaten this thing, we'll find that the tables have turned. As cancer survivors, many of us will feel an incredible urge to help other men who have just been diagnosed with prostate cancer.

We will feel a desire to share our experiences in prostate cancer support groups and find ways to give back. We will feel a need to urge every man to get annual PSA and digital-rectal exams, and to enlist the women we know in making sure this happens.

Many of us will take this as a moral obligation and we will tell our stories of survival to the world—-and hope that others will listen.

See also