Within a narrative, constructivist perspective, the experience of cancer generates a crisis affecting the basic elements that regulate the relationship between the internal and external worlds
[26][27][28], interrupting the sense of continuity of one’s life story over time. The crisis affects sense-making processes that support the individual’s personal life story and continuity of life
[26][29][30][31][32]. This experience imposes a narrative urgency on the mind, activating the need to synthesize new meanings and promoting the organization and connection of different elements of the experience
[26]. Therefore, the device responds naturally to the human being’s fundamental need
[33][34] to experience a sense of continuity and coherence by constructing stories in an intersubjective space and culture
[17][18][35][36][37]. Narration is an elective tool to construct a meaning-making
[38] of the BC experience and to reconfigure time perspectives
[32] during and after the illness
[39][40]. Narration aims to support adaptation, integrate the event, construct resources, promote well-being, and activate coping strategies
[31][41][42]. These processes can be considered transformative
[34] in their discursive tendency toward the search for a configuration that allows the patient to make sense, even if temporarily, of the experience of illness
[26]. Importantly, the creation of meaning not only alleviates pain and distress, but also facilitates growth and well-being in the aftermath of loss, in accordance with a constructivist perspective, in which one’s sense of self is established through the stories one constructs about oneself and the sharing of these stories with others. Experiences of loss can challenge the validity of a person’s core beliefs and undermine the coherence of the narrative. Individuals can, therefore, resolve the incongruity by engaging in one of two general processes of meaning-making: either assimilating the experience of loss into their pre-loss beliefs and self-narratives or adapting to it by reorganizing their beliefs and self-narratives
[38]. The literature has also highlighted how traumatic experiences, such as those related to illness, can produce post-traumatic growth (PTG) in the individual. PTG refers to a positive change in personality following events perceived as tragic
[43]. A study by Walsh and colleagues highlighted the central role of PTG in the experience of prostate cancer survival. The same result was also found in children with an oncological diagnosis, confirming that growth following an oncological diagnosis is also present in young children
[44]. Finally, a meta-analysis of 51 studies reported an assessment of the relationship between post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS), and PTG in cancer patients and survivors. It was found that the relationship between PTSD/PTSS and PTG is moderately positive and robust. There is some evidence that the threat of advanced cancer is more closely associated with growth, but none to support the hypothesis that a longer time duration from the moment of the cancer diagnosis allows survivors the opportunity to positively reinterpret or find meaning in the traumatic aspects of the disease, resulting in a greater growth experience
[45]. Considering BC as a pathology that produces a series of inevitable losses with experiences similar to those of the bereaved, Neimeyer and his colleagues
[46] highlighted how attributing meaning to loss can result in an important growth process. He has developed an alternative model of bereavement arguing that the reconstruction of meaning in response to loss is the central process in bereavement
[46][47]. He adopts as his starting point the view of bereavement as a process of reconstructing meaning, in line with the broader constructivist approach to psychotherapy
[48] from which he derives the idea that human beings are meaning makers: weavers of narratives that give thematic meaning to the salient plot structure of their lives
[49]. Through the innovative exploitation of culturally available belief systems, individuals construct permeable and provisional meaning structures that help them interpret experiences, such as bereavement or illness in this case, coordinate their relationships with others, and organize their actions toward personally meaningful goals
[50].