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Posts with tag story
Posted Jun 18th 2007 6:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Magazines, Thought for the Day

I just read this in the latest issue of
The Oprah Magazine (July 2007):
"I have come to believe . . . that what is most important to me must be spoken, made verbal, and shared, even at the risk of having it bruised or misunderstood." - Audre LordeIf I could have said this beautiful sentiment on my own, I would have. But I didn't, so I'll borrow it and profess that this is exactly how I feel.
Continue reading Thought for the Day: Sharing matters
Posted May 29th 2007 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Services, Cancer Survivors

Blogger Jen Creer recently shared with us that
Funky Winkerbean creator Tom Batiuk is weaving a breast cancer storyline into his comic strip. It seems he's not alone in his creative endeavor. The website
MyBreastCancerNetwork is also pairing cancer and comics -- but with a twist.
These strips are personal. You get to be the subject. Just tell your story -- you can be the patient, the survivor, the loved one -- and illustrator Dash Shaw will craft your journey into a breast cancer comic strip to be featured on this site.
PJ Hamel,
MyBreastCancerNetwork expert patient and author, was the first to have her story documented in this fashion, five years after she did battle with the disease. Here's just one excerpt of her journey, as told in her words and Shaw's illustrations.
Continue reading Breast cancer comics tell real-life stories
Posted Apr 28th 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: All Cancers, Services, Cancer Survivors, Thought for the Day

The way I see it, there are two threads common to the journeys of many cancer patients and survivors -- the desire to hear stories of others walking in similar shoes and the desire to be heard.
These threads have definitely woven themselves throughout my own cancer experience. When first diagnosed, I searched long and hard for personal stories of women struggling with and conquering breast cancer. Once I was well on my road to recovery, I wanted others to hear my story, in hopes it would resonate with those looking for the same comfort I once craved.
Won't you consider sharing your story too? It might just help you. It will surely help others.
Think about this:
On the Discovery Health website, an offer awaits you.
"We would love to hear your story," reads a portion of the site. "So would the many others who share your relationship to Cancer."
If you are at least 18 years of age and have a few minutes to spare, simply call 888-890-6339 and follow the instructions to record your voice. When all stories are ready to be published in podcast format, an online notice will be posted.
Listed on the website is this important note:
Considering the nature of this application, it is impossible for us to review or confirm the validity of information submitted. We do not vouch for or warrant the , and are not responsible for the contents of any message. The entries express the views of the individual calling, not necessarily the views of our website or any entity associated with this initiative. Any user who feels that a posted podcast is objectionable is encouraged to contact us immediately by email. We have the ability to remove objectionable recordings and we will make every effort to do so, within a reasonable time frame, if we determine that removal is necessary. This is a manual process, however, so please realize that we may not be able to remove or edit particular entries immediately.
You agree, through your use of this recording service, that you are at least 18 years of age and will not use this recording to post any material or links to material which is knowingly false and/or defamatory, inaccurate, abusive, vulgar, hateful, harassing, obscene, profane, sexually oriented, threatening, invasive of a person's privacy, or otherwise violative of any law. You agree not to submit by telephone any copyrighted material unless the copyright is owned by you.
Although this website does not and cannot review the messages recorded and is not responsible for the content of any of these entries, we at this website reserve the right to delete any recording for any or no reason whatsoever. You remain solely responsible for the content of your recording, and you agree to indemnify and hold harmless this website, and their agents with respect to any claim based upon transmission of your recording(s).
We at this website also reserve the right to reveal your identity (or whatever information we know about you) in the event of a complaint or legal action arising from any message recorded by you.
Please note that advertisements, chain letters, pyramid schemes, and solicitations are inappropriate on this initiative.
Posted Apr 4th 2007 12:05PM by Kristina Collins
Filed under: All Cancers, Magazines, Daily news, Cancer Survivors
This week, CBS News, the Washington Post, NY Times and USA Today shed a glaring light on people living with cancer. And Newsweek put the Livestrong wristband on its cover.
Pick up the April 9, 2007 issue of Newsweek to read the story How I live with Cancer.
Jonathan took the call on his cell phone at the Starbucks in New York's Penn Station...It was from a doctor I barely knew telling me that a CT scan-ordered after three weeks of worsening stomach pain-showed a large mass in my abdomen, with what she said was "considerable lymph node involvement." I rubbed my eyes and sensed the truth instantly: cancer, and not one that had been detected early. I was 46 years old and had not spent a night in the hospital since I was born. Nonsmoker. No junk food beyond the occasional barbecue potato chips. Jogged a couple of times a week. I was not remotely ready for this.
Later on in the article Johnathan tells his readers:
I have cancer, it's going to be bad, but I'll live until I'm 90. Probably not, but I turn 50 this year and, full of hope, recall that great line from "The Shawshank Redemption": "You can get busy living, or get busy dying." For me, it's no contest.
Posted Apr 1st 2007 9:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: All Cancers, Daily news, Thought for the Day

Cancer is a complicated disease often described by those who know it well in confusing medical, technical, and scientific terms. There's a way to understand it in simple terms, though. And a recent
CBS news story features a great run-down on the disease, its causes, how it grows, and more.
Think about this:
- Cancer refers to any one of a large number of diseases characterized by the uncontrollable growth of abnormal cells. These cells have the ability to infiltrate and destroy normal tissue and can spread -- metastasize -- throughout the body.
- Cancer is caused by damage in the DNA. DNA is like a set of instructions for cells and tells cells how to grow and divide. Normal cells can develop mutations in their DNA but can repair most of them. If they cannot make a repair, the cells often die. But certain mutated cells don't repair and don't die. They instead grow and become cancerous.
- Normal, healthy cells grow in an orderly, well-controlled way. They live for a set period of time and then die on schedule. Dead cells are replaced by new normal cells. Cancer cells, in contrast, grow in an uncontrolled manner. They don't die. They accumulate. One malignant cell becomes two, two become four, four become eight, and so on, until a mass of cells -- a tumor -- is created. Tumors remain small until they're able to attract their own blood supply, which allows them to obtain the oxygen and nutrients they need to grow larger.
- Not all cancers form tumors. Leukemia, for example, is a cancer of the blood, bone marrow, lymphatic system, and spleen.
- Cancer can take decades to develop. By the time a cancerous mass is detected, it's likely that 100 million to one billion cancer cells are present, and the original cancer may have been dividing for five years or more.
- Lung cancer is the top cancer killer among men and women and will kill 160,390 people in 2007.
Posted Mar 15th 2007 3:30PM by Kristina Collins
Filed under: All Cancers, Cancer Survivors, Head and Neck cancer
Lance Mackey beat cancer back in 2001 and on Tuesday he won the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Nome, Alaska. Mackey was diagnosed with neck cancer in 2001 and received surgery and radiation for his treatment.
Lance owns a kennel named Lance Mackey's Comeback Kennel. He indeed made a comeback, he has back to back wins in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race and the Yukon Quest International Sled Dog Race.
Mackey's status as a cancer survivor and champion musher will inspire other people with cancer, said Christine Schultz, 42, of Nome, a medical social worker who stood out in subzero temperatures with co-workers from Norton Sound Regional Hospital to watch Mackey cross the finish line. "I think it gives people hope they can overcome cancer and live their dreams," she said.
Don't ever doubt I can't do something," Mackey said in Nome after his win. "I lived through cancer."
Posted Mar 12th 2007 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Prevention, Magazines, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

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."
Posted Mar 2nd 2007 11:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Prevention, Cervical Cancer, Magazines

Tears are streaming down my face. I can't stop them, and I'm not sure I want to. In a way, I want to feel the tragedy of life lost to cancer because it makes it all real. It makes it personal. It makes me realize the same tragedy could happen to me, my family members, my friends. It makes me want to make a difference even more now that I've seen the chilling
pictures of a young woman dying of cervical cancer than moments earlier when I was moved mostly by my own breast cancer journey.
I first read about Heather Lyn Martin on the
JANE magazine website, home of a beautifully-written story --
I Hate Tumors -- by Sara Lyle, long-time friend of Heather and senior editor for
JANE, a publication for 20-something women. Sara's words powerfully depict the life and death of her friend, stricken with a disease she was sure she would beat. So sure, in fact, she asked Sara to help tell her success story.
Sadly, Heather never got to tell much. Because she died much too soon, at the age of 28. So Sara told the story through her own words and photos -- the same ones responsible for my tears -- and has just recently written a second essay, one year after her first story started reaching young people everywhere.
Sara wrote
Why I Still Hate Tumors after inspiring many young women to open their eyes to the realities of a deadly disease. Her words serve to raise awareness about the dangers of cervical cancer -- and the HPV virus that causes it -- and to point women in the direction of resources critical for preventing and conquering the disease.
Sara, because of the death of her dear friend, is saving lives with her message. And she just may save yours.
To see all that Sara has to offer in the fight against cervical cancer and other hated tumors, visit her
I Hate Tumors website.
Posted Feb 8th 2007 2:35PM by Kristina Collins
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Young Adult Cancers, Survivor Spotlight
How do you title this?
That is how Sasha titled her post on May 9, 2006. She was diagnosed with breast cancer on May 4th. Sasha lives in Alaska and blogs Sasha's Window. She is an amazing girl and I'm really glad that I've gotten to know her. Maybe I'll visit her someday! To find out updates about Sasha visit her webpage.
Here is Sasha's first post telling about her diagnoses of breast cancer:
On May 4th I was informed that I have breast cancer. Thankfully, I was with my dear friend Mike. Since then I have been overwhelmed with support, questions, concern, hope, fear. . . . from so many people that know and love me. The emails and phone calls that I've received have all been extremely comforting and I appreciate it more than you know. Its difficult to muster the energy to really explain what this whole ordeal has been so far, let alone what its going to be in the future. Although I would like to be able to talk about all of this with so many of you that want to talk to me, I just don't think I can right now. I am going to attempt to use this blog space as a way to stay connected with you all and keep you informed. I thought I'd start by sharing with you some of what has led up to this diagnosis and try to answer the common questions that you have been emailing.
Continue reading Survivor Spotlight: Sasha's Window
Posted Feb 8th 2007 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Prevention, All Cancers, Daily news, Celebrity news

When she asked her teenage daughters whether or not she should accept the American Cancer Society's
Mother of the Year award, the response was a resounding, "Mom, of course." So Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York, accepted the anti-cancer honor this week and told ABC's George Stephanopolous on Sunday why she is a good mom and a healthy role model.
"They see that I go running, I get on my bicycle, I do yoga, pilates, whatever else I do," Ferguson said. "Do you know what they do? Get up off the sofa, turn the television off, walk to work, walk around the block, more vegetables, more fruits at school, less soda pops, less fast food."
Ferguson, 47, says cancer prevention starts with good role modeling -- which is exactly what she has done as mom to princesses Beatrice and Eugenie.
"I can safely say one of the best things I've done is be a good mother," Ferguson said.
Ferguson, author of memoir
My Story and spokeswoman for Weight Watchers, first became known as the wife of Britain's Prince Andrew, the Duke of York. The pair divorced in 1996, but Ferguson's positive public persona has remained untarnished.
Posted Jan 31st 2007 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: All Cancers, Research, Daily news

As evidence mounts, it's becoming more and more clear that
chemo brain, a mental fogginess that can result from chemotherapy, is a real concern and not just a convenient excuse cancer patients use to explain away their flighty and forgetful tendencies. It seems the brain really can suffer cognitive damage from the poisonous drugs that fight off deadly cancer cells. And sometimes, this damage is present years after treatment.
Add to chemo brain the normal aging process as well as brain conditions such as mild cognitive impairment and even schizophrenia and the brain might not stand a chance of ever remembering anything. Unless we buy into the new concept of mental training -- somewhat like physical fitness training -- in which case we may be able to bring back a level of sharpness to our lives.
Research suggests this type of training may delay mental decline. And Betty Hall, 85, who is taking a brain fitness class at her senior living complex in Illinois, says brain-enhancing activities are definitely helping her.
Hall is participating in an eight-week program where she spends one hour per day, five days per week using a computer to match words and listen for details in stories. She says it's helping her remember where she places her keys and her grocery lists -- and it's even helping her in her bridge club.
"I've won four times out of the last five at bridge club, and I think the players are going to shoot me because I keep remembering the cards people have," she said. "It's much easier for me to concentrate . . . and I brag about it everywhere I go."
One clinical professor of neurology says brain health programs will explode over the next few years because of the stunning findings on this front. One study shows relatively short training regimens, lasting just five or six weeks, improve functioning for as long as five years. And booster sessions help advance these gains. Study participants says their everyday tasks, like managing finances, are much easier after mental workouts. Another study of the computer software Hall uses
shows the program shaves an average 10 years off the mental age of users.
Not all mental training is alike, and different cognitive difficulties may call for different training protocols. But the simple fact that I can work out my brain like I can work out my body gives me hope that I can possibly reverse the effects of chemotherapy on my own foggy brain, that I can one day not worry anymore that I might find my check book in the refrigerator and my cell phone in my sock drawer. Bring on the workouts!Thanks to Bev, my brainy friend, for this story tip!Posted Dec 22nd 2006 11:33PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: All Cancers, Research, Services

As a resource of medical information, take into account that there are over 25,000 medical journals published worldwide. For most of us, it is an overwhelming volume of information.
Doctor Evidence is an independent user-friendly fee-based medical search service connecting patients and doctors to the latest in relevant information which can then lead to the formulation of informed decisions about medical treatments -- and avoid potentially deadly mistakes in misdiagnosis, treatment or surgery.
In 2000, Dr. Todd Feinman founded Doctor Evidence after undergoing unnecessary surgery for intestinal cancer. After surgery he was told that the test that led to surgery had been a false-positive. He did not have cancer.
According to Dr. Feinman, "Every year, hundreds of new therapies and diagnostic tests are introduced to treat the thousands of diseases that are afflicting millions of adults and children. Finding evidence about the most accurate diagnostic tests and effective treatments requires the proper resources. This includes specialized information technologies, subscriptions to medical databases, medical librarians, and much more that is not readily available to most doctors and patients."
Yesterday, Extra aired a feature about Dr. Feinman and the Doctor Evidence service. During the report, a patient who had been told he might have pancreatic cancer turned to the Doctor Evidence website only to find out that one of the high-niacin level medications he was taking was mimicking symptoms of pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer. You can view the
video of the segment online here.
Doctor Evidence staff is comprised of doctors with expertise in evidence-based medicine, medical librarians with masters in library science, other professionals with expertise in healthcare, and information technology experts. To learn more, visit the
Doctor Evidence website.
Posted Nov 26th 2006 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Cancer events, Fundraisers, Sunday Seven

Photographer Paula Lerner was diagnosed with breast cancer just after beginning work on
Why We Walk: The Inspirational Journey Toward a Cure for Breast Cancer -- a book that captures through photographs the momentum of millions who year after year crowd America's streets and walk to conquer this disease.
A peek into this book is offered in the form of an online
slide show, hosted by the Washington Post. Set to inspiring music and lyrics and lasting just three minutes and 59 seconds, this media presentation tells a story about a disease that strikes every three minutes and kills every 14 minutes.
Gripping photographs and sobering facts dominate this powerful piece. There are shots of women in pink wigs and pink tutus, children hosing off physically and emotionally drained walkers, women holding up photographs of lost loved ones -- one with a printed message that reads,
Mom, we would walk forever to bring you back. May 14, 2004. There are smiles and cheers and tears. Every image packs an emotional punch.
The facts that appear throughout the slide show really stand out. They spell out in black and white some of the most important facts about breast cancer. And here they are -- all seven of them.
- 40,970 women and 460 men will die from breast cancer annually.
- Breast cancer is the most common cancer in African American women but ranks second to lung cancer in cause of cancer deaths.
- People over the age of 50 account for 77 percent of breast cancer cases.
- Breast cancer is most commonly diagnosed among Hispanic women and is the leading cause of cancer death among this group.
- Being overweight is linked to a higher risk of breast cancer, especially after menopause.
- Risk is increased by onset of menstruation before age 12, menopause after 50, first child after 30, or no children.
- Family history of breast cancer increases risk, especially if close relatives are diagnosed before the age of 50. A first-degree relative -- mother, sister, daughter -- with breast cancer approximately doubles the risk of breast cancer.
Posted Nov 12th 2006 3:00PM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Television, Daily news

Tonight at 8:00 PM on ABC's
Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, television viewers get to witness the week-long renovation of a 135-year-old farmhouse belonging to 26-year-old Shawna Farina and her three children.
It's not just the powerful makeover of this drafty Indiana house that makes for a touching story. It's the fact that Farina has been surviving breast cancer for the past 18 months, raising three children, working, raising money, and organizing her local
American Cancer Society Relay For Life walks -- while living in an old, drafty farmhouse -- that makes this story truly inspirational.
Inspired by her mother, who was diagnosed with breast cancer when she was a child, Farina became involved with Relay For Life -- a yearly, overnight event held in more than 4,700 communities to celebrate cancer survivorship. And now, in tandem with Farina's extreme makeover, volunteers from 18 different Relay for Life events across southern Indiana have been honoring Farina through
Extreme Relay For Life events consisting of five back-to-back 24-hour relays. More than 5,000 people and the cast of crew of the
Extreme Makeover: Home Edition participated while construction took place on Farina's house.
It all unfolds this evening -- the story of one courageous young woman raising awareness about breast cancer in the midst of her own battle. And the story of one dedicated bunch of supporters who are building her spirit -- and rebuilding her home.
Posted Nov 7th 2006 10:00AM by Jacki Donaldson
Filed under: Breast Cancer, All Cancers

I was doing fine at my every-three-month oncologist appointment yesterday. I kept my composure while telling my doctor all about my friend Amy who passed away just one month ago, after a short 15-month battle with breast cancer, at the tender age of 35.
As I detailed the story about how Amy's cancer spread to her brain and lungs, how she was given just two to 12 months to live, how she didn't even survive for two months, I saw in his eyes that he knew exactly why I had hand-picked this story just for him. He knew I was trying to determine my own risk for this same outcome -- and so he was understanding and compassionate and comforting in a medical sort of way. And he was convincing -- when he told me he predicts I will absolutely not follow Amy's same path.
I did just fine for our whole exchange. Until this same man shifted from medical speak and asked me the four simple words that never fail to trigger a trail of unstoppable tears.
"How are
you doing?" he asked.
He caught me off guard. I'm not sure I was prepared to dive beyond the surface of my emotions, to reveal my true fear of death from the same disease Amy was sure would not kill her. So I cried. And cried. A medical student fetched me a tissue, my doctor stood and touched my shoulder, and my three-year-old Danny watched with concern. I told everyone I was fine -- mostly, I am -- and I dried my tears. Before departing, my doctor hugged me and told me he'd send in a nurse to give me a flu shot.
Danny thought I cried because I was scared of the flu shot. Had it not been for his own appointment later in the day for the same flu shot, I would have let him believe this was the cause of my tears. Instead, I told him I was sad for a friend who was sick. And he was happy -- until a sharp needle pierced the skin of his little leg hours later.
Danny is happy once again. And I am happy too. My appointment revealed nothing suspicious, nothing worrisome, nothing except the fact that my oncologist thinks of me not just as a case, a statistic, a body that once harbored a disease. He thinks of me as a whole person. And that -- more than anything -- is what makes me cry.
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