
She doesn't have breast cancer. But she did have both breasts removed and reconstructed in January to ensure as much as she can that she will never develop the disease that has struck both her mother and father.
It's the dad connection that puts René Syler, former anchorwoman for
The Early Show, at such risk for breast cancer. That and the dozens of microcalcifications -- these can indicate cancer -- that repeatedly revealed themselves on mammograms and the diagnosis of atypical ductal hyperplasia that increases the risk of cancer. And while cancer was never diagnosed for this woman who was sure the disease would one day catch up with her, Syler is no stranger to the world of biopsies. And her breasts -- misshapen, shriveled, collapsed, and scarred from so many surgical procedures -- were proof of her frequent rides on the breast cancer merry-go-round.
Now Syler's breasts are gone. And she is breathing a great big sigh of relief. She calls her new "girls" incredible. And she calls her new mood "good."
"I see now that the specter of breast cancer has been permeating my life," says Syler whose story appears in the April 2007 issue of
The Oprah Magazine and whose book
Good-Enough Mother will be published in April.
"I couldn't really
live because I was always playing defense -- watching and waiting, wondering if this would be the year I'd be diagnosed."