Being a friend of someone with terminal illness must be quite the roller coaster. I’ve had the privilege a few times, but never for so long a stretch of time as my illness has asked of my tribe. That in itself is a beautiful gift, but the cost of it is also not lost on me.
Being a friend of someone with terminal illness must be quite the roller coaster. I’ve had the privilege a few times, but never so long a stretch of time as my illness has asked of my tribe. That in itself is a beautiful gift, but the cost of it is also not lost on me.

There’s something both sacred and sorrowful about watching friendships move through the seasons when you are the one who is dying. In the beginning, the circle is wide — full of love and meals, visits and prayers, the kind of tender urgency that comes when people don’t yet know what to do but feel compelled to do something. It’s a holy flood of kindness, and it humbles you to your core.

But time, as it does, stretches. Months turn into years, and the edges of the circle shift. Some friends drift quietly into the background, not because they stopped caring, but because life resumes its relentless rhythm. Kids grow, careers change, and the crisis that once felt immediate now lives in the quieter corners of their awareness.
And honestly? I get it. I’ve been that friend before too — before this diagnosis rewrote my sense of time. I’ve meant to reach out and didn’t. I’ve avoided pain I didn’t know how to face. I’ve loved someone deeply and still failed to show up in the way I wish I had. So I hold that understanding now with open hands and no resentment, just a bittersweet ache that love sometimes outlasts proximity.
What’s left are the ones who stay through the long middle — not just the early crisis or the final goodbye, but the drawn-out, unpredictable middle where the reality of terminal illness stops being dramatic and just becomes life. They sit with me in the mundane. They ask the unglamorous questions. They know when to come close and when to give space. They’ve learned that faithfulness doesn’t always look like constant presence, but steady presence.
And then, there are those who come back — friends who circle in again after time away, sometimes awkwardly, often tenderly. Their return feels like mercy. It reminds me that love isn’t linear; it’s tidal. People ebb and flow in and out of each other’s lives, and that movement, too, can be grace.

I used to think loyalty meant never leaving. Now I think it means being willing to return.
So to my friends — those who have stayed, drifted, returned, or simply remembered me from afar — please know this: your love has carried me. Every text, every silence, every prayer whispered when you didn’t know what to say has mattered.
Illness has taught me that friendship isn’t measured in constant nearness but in the threads of care that remain, even when time and distance stretch them thin.
If I could sum it up, I’d say this: the seasons of friendship are not a sign of failure, but of humanity. And what a fragile, beautiful, sacred thing it is to be human together — even in the shadow of goodbye.

thank you for this! Your words have encouraged me to go visit a friend. I am thankful you have friends and family that encourage you too. I look forward to your posts! 🩷
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thank you for this! Your words have encouraged me to go visit a friend. I am thankful you have friends and family that encourage you too. I look forward to your posts! 🩷
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thank you for this! Your words have encouraged me to go visit a friend. I am thankful you have friends and family that encourage you too. I look forward to your posts! 🩷
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Let me know how your visit goes!
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I tried posting once and it said it couldn’t be posted so apologies if you get two messages.
I went to visit my friend today. He is an older gentleman from our church in the nursing home who has MS and is wheelchair bound. I walked in and he was waiting by the door. He had not known that I was coming. When I asked why he was there he said “I’m just waiting for someone to come visit me“. He said he had been praying for a while now for visitors. I felt convicted that I had not gone sooner. We had great conversations on how the Lord has answered specific prayers in our lives and I left encouraged and full. Thank you for the reminder to go visit a friend. I hope you are doing well.
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I love this story, Tarah! God indeed is ready to use us if we follow His leading!
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Hannah, this is a helpful and insightful masterpiece of insight and grace!
My own disability is not “terminal” (although I am aware that it’s reducing my life expectancy), but I know the initial wave of care and concern and how it subsides in the “long middle” of my own experience. After 14 years, there are few who have remained, and mostly family, and even their presence and support has grown thin, but I praise God for them, as well as for those who have drifted to a greater distance. I really appreciate how you so aptly described all of this in your post.
Thank you and bless you,
Craig
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