Pink is the color of breast cancer awareness, and since October
is breast cancer awareness month, you’re going to start seeing a lot of pink in
support of this important cause. Sports teams play in pink jerseys, yogurt
companies top their containers with pink, charities sponsor walks and
fundraisers with pink themes.
A woman’s lifetime risk of breast cancer is about 1 in 8,
while a man’s is 1 in 1,000. And although breast cancer has one of the highest
survival rates among the cancers, nearly 40,000 U.S. women died of breast
cancer last year.
Almost fifteen years ago, on a Tuesday evening in May, I
found a lump. At my relatively young age, with no family history of breast
cancer, the few people who knew about the lump tried to console me that,
statistically, it was probably nothing. Except my doctor, who looked me in the
eye and said, “I can’t tell you it’s nothing. We need to get you in for tests.”
Those tests all confirmed the worst. About a month later, I
had a lumpectomy. My oncological surgeon spoke with me as I was wheeled out of
surgery. In my groggy post-op state I missed most of the specifics, but I
clearly remember her squeezing my arm and saying, “I think you’re going to be
fine.”
My oncologist told me I had no reason to have a mastectomy,
but she encouraged aggressive treatment to take every precaution against a
recurrence. It made sense to me; do everything possible to nip this in the bud
while I was young and healthy and had fantastic support systems in place to get
me through chemo. So over twelve weeks I had four rounds of poison pumped into
me. The chemo made me sick to a degree that defies description. It also took my
hair (I was oddly okay with this at the time, but now, years later, haircuts
freak me out) and put my body into menopause. When chemo was done I went in for
daily for six weeks of radiation; although it was annoying going to the
hospital each day, the treatment itself was a piece of cake.
I still think about my cancer every day, when I notice the
scar high on my left breast or when someone else is diagnosed or when the call
goes out for organ or blood donors (a cancer history makes me ineligible to
donate). Sometimes the full experience floods over me in waves of nausea, but
more often it’s like remembering a bad work experience: an unpleasant event
that consumed much of your life but that you survived, stronger than before.
Surviving cancer makes me feel both invincible and
vulnerable. When I was diagnosed, I prayed for five more years of life so that
I could raise my kids, who were very young at the time, to an age when they
would remember me. God granted me more than double that, and I am grateful, but
I still have moments when I forget to love my life. Sometimes I wonder what I
was supposed to learn from the experience, whether there was something special
God was expecting me to do with my remaining days, and whether I have honored
my second chance.
Now that I understand the path, part of my journey includes
walking with others living with cancer. I do what I can, but this is a hard
road. The easier part is to advocate for early detection and support for
research, for this and all other cancers. So here’s my pitch: even if you think
you are too young, have no family history, are feeling great, are really busy—eat
right, get the mammogram, get the colonoscopy. Pay attention to your body. Do
the self-exams. Early detection saves lives and body parts.
I love the color pink, and I wear at least a touch of it every
day in October. I wear it in honor of breast cancer survivors, and in memory of
those who could not overcome. I wear it for my daughters (and sons), with a
prayer that they will never have to face what I did. I wear it in gratitude for
my wonderful doctors, who gave me hope, and in gratitude for all of those who
supported me during those difficult days.
But mostly I wear it because it is a happy color that
reminds me that each day is a gift, tied up in a pink ribbon.