This is the moment you've been counting down to for months, even years: the last treatment session, the final scan showing clear results.
You'd think it would feel like pure relief, and maybe part of it does. But if you're also feeling confused, anxious, or even a little lost now that treatment has ended, you're not alone.
The transition from active treatment to life after cancer is rarely what families expect.
During treatment, your days had structure with regular medical appointments and check-ins with your child's care team. You knew exactly what to do, when to do it, and who to call with questions.
The path forward was clear, even when it was difficult.
When treatment ends, that structure largely disappears. Suddenly, you're navigating what comes next without the framework you've relied on for so long.
Many parents describe feeling abandoned or vulnerable during this transition. Without frequent medical oversight, you're managing the weight of watching for signs of relapse while also trying to let your child return to normal life. It's a strange balance between vigilance and trust because, make no mistake, you’re all dealing with a kind of trauma. Cancer is trauma.
You might expect to feel immediate joy when treatment ends. Instead, you might feel:
Your child has their own adjustment ahead. Treatment created a unique routine, and they may miss certain aspects of it—the attention from nurses, the predictability of appointments, or even the excuse to skip school responsibilities.
Despite the fear and anxiety and side-effects, your child also probably felt…special. And they might miss that. Here’s how to help:
What about you? Taking care of yourself through this transition is just as important:
The end of treatment isn't a finish line where everything instantly returns to how it was before diagnosis. It's a transition point where your family begins building what comes next. That takes time, patience, and grace for everyone involved.
Your child has shown incredible strength throughout treatment, and now they have to learn how to be a kid again. And you have to learn how to be you again.
At Cancer Kickers Soccer Club, we know that supporting our teammates and their families doesn't end when treatment does.
The community that walked alongside you during the hardest days is still here— from beginning to end and far beyond.