91亚色

Skip to main content Skip to local navigation

Study: Dating after breast cancer can be a delicate balance

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month鈥攁s we show our support and celebrate the women who have overcome this disease, we also recognize that hardships that continually face these survivors.

Women who鈥檝e had breast cancer often feel discouraged and vulnerable in the dating world, but 91亚色 researchers say there is good news. It is possible to develop successful intimate relationships. Unknown to either, though, the new partner will have to pass a 鈥渕an test鈥 first.

In addition, dating and establishing a new relationship post-cancer had the potential to restore the women鈥檚 often diminished self- and bodily-esteem.

Karen Fergus

Karen Fergus

鈥淧revious research has shown that dating is a top concern for single women post-breast cancer,鈥 says 91亚色 psychology Professor Karen Fergus. 鈥淏ut there was surprisingly little research in this area. Not much was known about the dating process, its success or the role of cancer in any new relationship.鈥

Fergus of 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Health and her grad student Darya Kurowecki, currently at the University of Ottawa in the Faculty of Medicine, looked at the process that 15 heterosexual women, most now in intimate relationships, underwent following breast cancer and surgery. They found that these women went through a process often over several years before feeling ready to date. Once they met someone, there was a series of successive disclosures, which tested whether or not the man could accept them as cancer survivors, scars and all. If not, the women decided not to pursue the relationship further.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a stigmatized illness. It can recur and it entails disfiguring surgery,鈥 says Fergus. 鈥淚n addition, there are often other impairments or losses.鈥 A woman could be thrown into early menopause, before having had the opportunity to have children. There are usually self-confidence issues following breast cancer and surgery and that can affect the woman鈥檚 ability to start new relationships.

鈥淭he first level of the man test is, can they accept I鈥檝e had a cancer history. The next step is, will they accept the fact I鈥檝e had a disfiguring surgery 鈥 a lumpectomy, one or two mastectomies, and/or reconstruction,鈥 says Fergus. 鈥淏asically, what they鈥檙e doing is testing the safety of this budding relationship, but they鈥檙e also playing their cards close to the vest. They are protecting themselves in that they鈥檙e not going to subject themselves to more potential rejection and vulnerability than is necessary.鈥

Darya Kurowecki

Darya Kurowecki

If the men were accepting of these disclosures, then the couple needed to discuss some serious issues and that seemed to accelerate the emotional intimacy of the new relationship, she says. They may need to discuss the fact the cancer may recur or that they may carry a cancer gene that could be passed on to their children, or perhaps they are no longer able to conceive children.

The third or ultimate step is physical intimacy and revealing their scars.

鈥淲hat struck us the most,鈥 says Fergus, 鈥渋s their vulnerability combined with this incredible amount of courage and strength that it takes for these women to put themselves out there in the dating world and later, to share their cancer history both verbally and physically with a prospective partner. That combination of profound vulnerability and strength is admirable.鈥

To Fergus, the 鈥渕an test鈥 is great.聽 鈥淎t one point Darya said to me, 鈥榶ou know, it鈥檚 as though these men are being tested鈥 which led her to develop this category.鈥澛 It鈥檚 an empowering concept, says Fergus, because 鈥渋t turns the feeling of inferiority on its head and says are you going to be strong enough to accept my history and accept me as I am. So instead of please don鈥檛 reject me, it鈥檚 are you going to be strong enough to accept me.鈥

As it turns out, for many that answer was yes. That is a message of hope Fergus wants women to get.

鈥淔or a lot of women who are single and don鈥檛 know other women who have a satisfying new relationship after cancer, they don鈥檛 even know that鈥檚 possible,鈥 says Fergus. 鈥淭he fact that we were able to go and find these women and interview them, and not withstanding these were women willing to come forward 鈥 our findings did affirm that fulfilling intimate relationships were possible after cancer, and this truly is a message of hope.鈥

The research, 鈥淲earing my Heart on my Chest: Dating, New Relationships, and the Reconfiguration of Self-esteem after Breast Cancer鈥, was published this year in the print issue of Psycho-Oncology: Journal of the Psychological, Social and Behavioral Dimensions of Cancer.