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Dialogues · Crisis

Parent: “I need to tell you something. Dad is sick.”

Parent-initiated disclosure of a parent's illness. The hardest version of the “honest answer” conversation. Underdramatize; overinclude.

Line art of two figures at a kitchen table with two mugs, warm late-afternoon light
For ages
10–1213–1516–18
Topics
Family ConflictMental HealthCommunication & Connection
Family context
High Conflict Home
I.
The scene

What's happening.

You sit your 14-year-old down at the kitchen table on a Sunday. “I need to tell you something. Dad has cancer. We found out last week.” Their face goes still.

II.
The instinctive version

What we usually say — and why it backfires.

Parent

I don't want you to worry. He's going to be totally fine. The doctors caught it early. Don't tell your friends or your sister.

Teen

...okay.

(The teen lives with secret worry alone, can't ask questions, doesn't have the truth.)

III.
The better version

What works — and why.

Parent

Dad has cancer. The doctors found it early and the treatment plan is good — but I want to tell you what we know, not what I hope you'll hear. Are you ready for the details, or do you want a minute first?

Teen

Tell me.

Parent

It's [type]. He starts treatment in two weeks — that'll mean some hospital days, he'll feel tired, he'll lose his hair. The doctors think the outcome will be good but they don't promise. I'm telling your sister tonight too; you don't have to manage that. You can tell whichever friends you want — there's no rule about secrecy. Questions you have today, ask. Questions later, also ask. There will be times I don't know the answer; I'll tell you that instead of making one up. Okay?

IV.
Memorize these

Key phrases to reach for in the moment.

If your teen is in crisis

Pediatric and adolescent grief services exist alongside adult cancer care — most major cancer centers have child-life or family-services teams. Kids whose parent has a serious illness benefit from peer groups (CancerCare for Kids, Hope Heals Camp, depending on age). School counselor as a parallel support. Therapy for the teen is appropriate even if they're 'handling it' — anticipatory grief is real grief.

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