Clinically, almost all lung cancer patients will go through a series of subtle and complicated mental journey: from the initial discomfort or routine physical examination to the discovery of suspicion, patients are eager to know whether there is a tumor or not, during which they will actively cooperate with the doctor for examination and treatment, and invariably develop anxiety and anxiety, and have serious sleepless nights. When they go through such and such invasive or non-invasive examinations, they gradually develop a little fear, so they wait for the final conclusion in nervousness and anxiety and fear and apprehension, at this time, most of them will be slightly lucky: maybe not? When the authoritative doctor you trust tells you exactly: “Sorry, you do have lung cancer. At this time, the patient’s tense heartstrings are broken, “the sky is falling”, “everything is finished”, so the pessimism, despair, frustration, emotionally fall into the abyss, in the process of painful and frustrating struggle, they will show that they can not accept the objective fact of the disease, and may even In the process of painful and frustrating struggle, they may show that they cannot accept the objective fact of the disease, and even question the doctor if the operation is wrong or if the specimen is a fake one, and a few patients may go to many so-called authoritative hospitals and authoritative doctors for proof. When “everything is a fact, everything is in vain”, they become depressed, do not want to talk, do not want to communicate, avoid family and friends. At this time, if you can get the encouragement, help and support from friends and relatives, through external psychological intervention and your own psychological adjustment, most patients can overcome the above negative psychology, come out from the low point and actively cooperate with the treatment. As doctors and family members, how can we help patients to come out from the negative psychology, restore a healthy psychology, and then cooperate with the treatment in a positive state of mind? Zhang Meichun, Department of Respiratory Medicine, Guangzhou First People’s Hospital