Love Hurts
Ryan O'Neal fails science, fatherhood with Farrah Fawcett cancer cause theory
There has been news recently about studies that say cell phones and driving with your hand out the window cause cancer. This week professional doctor and scientist actor Ryan O'Neal added two more likely causes of cancer: Stress and Tatum O'Neal.
O'Neal appeared on Piers Morgan Tonight to promote (what else) his new reality show with daughter Tatum. During the interview he spoke extensively about his relationship with Farrah Fawcett and the time leading up to her death from cancer in 2009. Namely that he thought it was caused by his kids and their problems.
"What bothers me the most is that there was turmoil during my love affair with Farrah, a lot of it caused by my family, by my kids. All of them, but particularly Tatum. And I just think, if she had never met us, would she be alive today? Because nobody knows what causes cancer, really, do they? And she didn't smoke and she didn't drink and she exercised every day. She believed in good health. And then we came along, the four of us, and gradually she got weaker."
While O'Neal seems to be grieving, he also seems to have mistaken the dark thoughts you tell your therapist with the things you confess on national television. When Morgan reminds him that his statement could be hurtful to his daughter, he shrugs and gives a hollow "Sorry, Tatum."
First of all, when you meet someone and they die 30 years later, those things are not related. Most people get weaker between the ages of 32 and 62, and they are content to call it "aging" and "a fact of life." But sometimes the sanctimonious among us forget that no matter how great you eat or how well you take care of yourself, life isn't fair and neither is cancer.
Second of all, to blame the cancer on Tatum, who was estranged from O'Neal for 25 years, is obscene. Ryan O'Neal had enough of his own drama to stress Fawcett out.
And thirdly, while chronic stress has been shown to cause heart disease, sleep problems, digestive problems and depression, according to the National Cancer Institute it has not been linked with cancer.
Losing someone you love is painful and confusing, and sometimes there are no easy answers. But blaming your kids? That's just wrong.