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My name is Leitha and I was 36 when I found a knot in my
breast. It was huge, and the doctors kept asking me "how
could you have not found this earlier?" I'm sure I had
noticed it earlier but dismissed it as a swollen fibrous cyst
because every breast exam I ever had I asked about lump and
bumps in my breast and was told it was normal because I
had fibrous cyst that would swell before my cycle. I also had
a mammogram in 1997 that showed nothing, and to top off all of
this, I had no history of cancer of any kind on my Mom's side,
and two cancers on my Dad's side, lymphoma and my grandmother
had lung cancer. Both were or had been heavy smokers and my
Dad was not an "exercise & eat right" kind
of man.
I found my lump while getting into the shower. I moved my left
arm in a way that caused it to hurt. I mentioned it to my Mom,
who mentioned to my sister, who mentioned it to everybody she
ever met in her life. As you can imagine my sister came back
to me full of information she had gathered. One of the
tidbits she learned was "if it hurts, it's not cancer." I
put off having it checked out for about a month or so, and
then when I did go to the clinic the nurse practitioner
assured me it felt like a cyst, but she scheduled a mammogram
anyway. March 13, 2004, a month later, I'm sitting in a waiting
room believing I will go in, have the pics taken, have a cyst
drained and go home.
I was called, and as the tech and I walked she mentioned how
young I was, asked about my family & medical history. My
answers led her to assume (as everyone had) we would probably
find a cyst. So for 20 minutes I was twisted and contorted,
smushed and flattened, then told to get dressed and wait for
the results.
The tech came in, followed by a doctor. This was about the
time my heart jumped into my throat and started beating
faster. The tech looked shaken as the doctor asked about my
family & my medical history, then said "we need you
to be here at 7:30 in the morning for a biopsy." I mustered up
the strength to say "okay", and he left the room.
"Is this just a precautionary biopsy or does he really
think I have cancer?" I asked. "Prepare
yourself for the worst news and hope for the best." she
answered. I asked if the mammograms are often wrong and isn't
it likely it's not cancer. She looked at me with tears in her
eyes and said "honey, it doesn't look good."
I got into the car, turned on the radio and the song
"Something More" by Kristy Starling came on. The
words were like a cool breeze that penetrated my whole
body. I drove around Galveston, couldn't tell you for how
long. I finally got a motel room instead of driving four
hours round trip to be back at the hospital by 7:30. I called
my Mom, and of course she was dumbfounded as I was. I called
my son, but got the answering machine (17-year-olds and
their busy schedules). I went out, picked up something to eat
and a bottle of wine. Me, myself and I had a pity party that
night, the first of many.
The next day I got the core biopsy, went home and continued
having pity parties until Friday when I was due back at the
hospital for the results. The upcoming Friday, March 19, 2004
my son took the day off from school to go with me. They gave
me a suite number, so I had to ask the information booth where
it was. As we rounded the last quarter, we both stopped at
sight of a bid sign that said "Radiation Oncology" and
then looked at each other. I said "You know this isn't
going to be the news we had hoped for, don't you?" He
shook his head yes, put his arms around me, kissed the top of
my head (he's taller than me), took my hand in his as we
walked through the doors. We ended up having to sit in the
waiting room for quite a time, enough time for reality to sink
in.
My son is a carbon copy of me in looks, personality and a
twisted sense of humor. Were reading magazines, cutting up
& laughing. People are looking at us like we're crazy, but
that doesn't stop us. We were finally put into a room, where
the goofy-ness continued until finally, a team of four doctors
walked into the room. A hush fell on the room as Dr. Hatch sat
at the desk I was sitting beside. She looked at me, as her
eyes filled with tears she said "I don't have good news
for you. You have cancer". I looked at my son sitting
across the room who was looking at me as if he couldn't move.
Dr. Hatch asked if we needed a minute or two. I said no, we
had pretty much expected this when they directed us to
radiation oncology. My next question was "so what do we
have to do". She explained the procedures to me and set a
date to get started. Surgery to remove the cancer &
cancerous lymph nodes, a second surgery because they didn't
get it all (dirty margins), 12 weekly doses of taxol, 3 months
of FAC and 6 weeks of radiation.
Weeks before I had my mammogram I found out that Bill, a
friend from my childhood was working as the largest Christian
radio station in the country (which happened to be in
Houston). I emailed him a friendly note and by the time he was
able to reply, I was knee deep in the process of getting me
cancer free. Not only did I have the love and support of my
Mom & Son, I was blessed with Bill who fell head over
heals in love with me in spite of my cancer. They all pitched
in and help me, doctored me, cleaned up after me (yuck, I
know) but never a complaint. They've all driven me many times
to and from appointments, a four hour round trip during the
highest gas prices ever.
One thing I learned is, cancer had to be harder on those
who love me than it was on me. I watched the looks on their
faces every time I had a surgery (which was awful), every chemo
treatment (which was worse), and radiation that had one square
foot of my left side so raw I cried in pain almost constantly,
and I'm not a crier. Actually, I am smiling, laughing and
positive most of the time. I'm often asked "how can you
be so happy all the time with all you've been through?"
My answer is, I have a family who cares about, the most
wonderful son, a man (Bill) who loves and adores me, and a God
who has me in his healing hands. I've got more reasons to be
happy than to be upset. A positive attitude goes a long way.
January 2005 was my last radiation treatment, was growing
some hair, happy and in love and waiting to get a new baseline
and be called cancer free. Life was looking up, I was gaining
strength and looking forward to a beautiful spring. Less than
months pass before my appointment with my chemo oncologist. He
sets up a gyn appointment for me, A week later I get a
call from the gyn doctor. I get light headed and sick to my
stomach when she tells me "you have cancer again, we need
you to come in tomorrow". "Okay" I say, still
in disbelief. I call Bill and say "I've got to go to the
hospital tomorrow, I've got cancer again". He was silent
for a few second, probably trying to decided if I said what it
sounded like I said. I told him it's cervical cancer and that
was all I really knew.
It's been another year of fighting another cancer and I'm
still in a lot of pain. Between Mar 2005 and Oct 2005, I
literally almost died due to complications from the
treatments. God didn't take me out of this world so I'm
guessing he's still got work for me to do. The radiation on my
lower abdomen, they think may be causing the tremendous pain
I'm having in my back. I've had a CT scan & MRI in the
last three weeks and am having another bone scan. We're
praying it's not more cancer. All prayers are welcomed.
If you have cancer, keep your spirits up. I know that sounds cliché,
but really, don't stop laughing, don't stop living, you can
win this fight. Remember, and remind your family & friends
that every day is a gift from God.
Bill, the love of my life bought me a wall plaque that reads:
WHAT CANCER CAN'T DO
It cannot cripple love
It cannot shatter hope
It cannot corrode faith
It cannot destroy peace
It cannot kill friendship
It cannot suppress memories
It cannot silence courage
It cannot invade the soul
It cannot steal eternal life
It cannot conquer the spirit
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