Warning:
the subject matter of this piece will be hard for some people.
♫
The
reminder letter came at least a year ago. “It’s time for you to make an
appointment to get a mammogram,” it said.
Am
I the only woman who does not say, “Yippee!” when told to get a mammogram? I
think not.
The
letter went into a pile of things I meant to get to eventually.
A few weeks ago, it surfaced, and I decided I
might as well get it over with. I called the imaging center and made an
appointment.
A
mammogram is an x-ray of the inside of the breast with the intent of detecting
cancer. We women are encouraged to get mammograms regularly after age forty.
Mammograms
have come a long way. Around the year 2000 mammograms went digital and became
more accurate, but now there is something called digital breast tomosynthesis,
or 3D imaging. This means that mammograms are more accurate than ever.
My
appointment day came, I went into town to the clinic, and began my mammogram
journey. First, they took a set of 2D pictures, and then I was walked down the
hall for some 3D pictures. Then I was walked down another hall, where a chipper
radiologist who was about half my age and size introduced herself and proceeded
to do an ultrasound of my right breast, then – whoo! that goo is cold! – went
up into my right armpit, where, she said, my lymph nodes were all clear, and
that was good.
By
then I knew where this was going.
She
showed me one of my mammogram x-rays and pointed out the jagged edges on this
one small object.
“Jagged
edges are typical of cancer,” she said.
I
thought at the time that she was remarkably perky as she gave me this news. I
prefer to believe that she was happy to have caught the little tumor* red-handed.
*Later, during surgery, a second tumor was found hiding behind the first tumor, but I didn't find that out until about a month later.
A
mammogram does not a diagnosis make, so the next step was to have a needle
biopsy. I won’t describe that, except to say it made me think of the Spanish
Inquisition.
The
results, as expected, were that the little (7 mm, or approximately 3/8 of an
inch) tumor is, indeed, cancer.
The
word, cancer, carries such a powerful punch of fear and dread. It punched me. I
was dumb with shock. Still, even though that visceral reaction prevails, I know
rationally that a cancer diagnosis is not as likely to be a death sentence as
it once was. My husband, Rick, had cancer twice (prostate and bladder), and was
cured twice. Cancer is not what killed him.
I
have gradually been getting used to the diagnosis the past few weeks. What I am
having a hard time with right now is the dark silence, or the haunted stare,
when I tell someone, because, you know, the word, cancer, carries such a
powerful punch.
Don’t
cry for me, Vashon Island. My surgeon tells me emphatically that this is
curable. I will have a lumpectomy, radiation, and a few years of a cancer
discouraging drug. This is standard treatment protocol when breast cancer is
caught early and small, and a treatment that has brought through many, many
survivors. I’m hearing from a lot of those survivors now, who are giving me
empathy and tips on the process.
Because
I have told some people and the cat is out of the bag, I thought I’d write
about the experience as a form of rumor control, and so that I, and you, all of
us, know we’re not alone.
Boy,
are we not alone. I have learned that there are a lot of people in this
community being treated for various forms of cancer, and I did not know that
until I said I had cancer, and that brought out the stories. My cancer looks no
big deal compared to what some people are experiencing. I am a cancer rookie. I
have not started treatment and I feel fine. Once I have surgery, I will not
feel fine, and I always remember that life has no guarantees.
Here
comes the sermon: I am glad I did not decide to put off my mammogram for
another year. Yes, mammograms can be painful, and having a mammogram is one of
the most vulnerable moments in a woman’s (and sometimes a man’s) life. I’m
always thinking, please, Jesus, don’t let there be an earthquake while I’m
clamped into this machine.
Now
you will be thinking that, too. Sorry.
Stop
putting off your mammogram, and go find out you are healthy, or get saved by
early detection.
And
seize the day, starting now.
Funny
how a cancer diagnosis sharpens your focus on what is important.
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