Reflection on October and hope for the future…

Welcome November. I love November… it’s my birthday month, a time of gratitude, cozy nights sipping tea, reading by the fire. It also marks the end of a very busy month in the breast cancer world.

I recently met this spunky survivor at a speaking engagement. She is a 30 year survivor, who lost her daughter in 6 months to metastatic breast cancer. Light in darkness.

As I reflect on “Breast Cancer Awareness month” I wonder if all the hoopla and pinkness made a difference. Millions of dollars raised, miles walked and pink things purchased. What difference does it make? How will it be used to save lives? (said in a hopeful way…)

While we celebrated and cheered across the country, thousands died of breast cancer. Several were my friends. I have a really hard time attending celebration events that raise money for awareness while I watch young moms enter Hospice care. As I wrap myself in a pink boa I think of the agony of treatments that render women so sick and weak that they can’t get out of bed for days on end. Where are these stories in the pink narrative? Where is the compassion? the outrage? How have we grown so blind to this that we only tell the happy stories?

I am invited to many cheerful events in October… however, when I speak I bridge the happy with reality. Sometimes to the audience’s confusion or disapproval. I talk about facing cancer, of hope and determination. I share smiling pictures of our family as we persevered… but then I tell the “rest of the story.” I talk about the reality of metastatic breast cancer and how many are dying every day… 110.

I share the stories of Janice, Mary Ann, Sandra, Wendie, Shayne and more. I have lost so many friends that I can see their beautiful faces, but sometimes not remember their names. I remember the men I have met facing this disease in the shadows – as we forget to acknowledge they are victims.

One of the most vivacious, beautiful friends I know entered Hospice care this week. Another, a beautiful woman I shared a stage with at a Twisted Pink gala two years ago died. And yet another, a figurehead in the MBC community who founded Met Up is coming in and out of consciousness as she faces her last days on earth*. This is just one week in the reality of breast cancer. This is the whole story.

November, 10 years ago…

Ten years ago, on November 9th. Our world changed forever when we heard the words, “you have breast cancer.” As most of you know, I was 30 years old and 7 months pregnant.  One day picking out fixtures for our new home and the next face to face with an oncologist. We have never been the same. That first year of treatment was impossibly hard. Chemo, welcoming a new baby, more chemo, surgeries, pain, fear, anger, disappointment, loss… but ultimately hope. We made it through- changed, stronger, resilient. Determined to take this awful experience and turn it into something beautiful. Bennett was born and the world became bright in the face of darkness. We created Hope Scarves and funneled our pain into something meaningful to help others. But, that isn’t where the story ends. We don’t stay in the bright, joyful light. Because that isn’t the whole story. Like 30% of those who are diagnosed with breast cancer, seven years after the first diagnosis, the cancer came back. It tried to sink us again. For a while we were drowning.

But, we found a little bit of light in the darkness. We clung to it. And realized that joy and sadness can exist at the same time. Hope and fear.

Five smiles, gone too soon.

That’s what I want for the breast cancer movement. A recognition that we can celebrate survivors without forgetting about those who are dying. We can talk about prevention & early detection while devoting MORE money to metastatic breast cancer research. It doesn’t have to be a separate campaign or organization.  We have been successful at awareness, not let’s kick it into high gear to support research –  metastatic breast cancer research. Just as there is light in the darkness, there is room in the celebration for the sadness. We just need to work at it. It isn’t easy. Believe me finding my way as a metastatic patient is work, every day. Some days are harder than others.  So, as a breast cancer community – can we work at combining the light and the darkness to create a more realistic approach to breast cancer advocacy? Can we broaden the conversation & talk about living and dying.  Shift our focus to supporting and finding more treatment options for those facing death.  Teaching us to fly fish, meditate and do yoga is wonderful.  Sharing scarves and stories of hope is inspiring.  But, none of this will save our lives.  We must discuss and support metastatic breast cancer research.   We can’t be afraid of the dark.

Don’t forget Jill, Kathryn, Lisa, Mary Eleanor or Nikki.  Please.  Celebrate your survivorship while also demanding money for metastatic breast cancer research. We can’t abandon the hundreds of thousands who will die of this disease, unless we find more treatment options. Tell the whole story of breast cancer- the pretty and the ugly. Don’t be afraid to let darkness shadow the pink – it might lead to the brightest light of all.

Only then will pink really matter. Let’s make it so.

Lara

*As I hit publish, I learned that Beth died.  The most dedicated, determined leader of the MBC community today.  Her words and passion inspired thousands. Me included. This post is in her honor. May I help continue to push the needle she shoved with all her might.  Rest in peace, Beth.

8 replies
  1. Dayna N.
    Dayna N. says:

    Thank you for these words, Lara, and for your determination to tell the whole story. I’m always learning from you. Joy and Sadness go hand in hand. You are a sage my friend.

    Reply
  2. J. Taylor
    J. Taylor says:

    I was wondering…i have a friend here who has fought breast cancer and now brain cancer. I tried to get a scarf for my Niece but did not get any response before we lost her. Could you tell me how I can go about doing this for my friend here in Georgia?

    Reply
    • Lara MacGregor
      Lara MacGregor says:

      I am so sorry to hear this. I will look into what might have happened – I will send you a direct email to you with the link to request a scarf or we can get the information over the phone. Thank you for reaching out to hope scarves. I promise to do our very best to help your friend.

      Reply
  3. Becky
    Becky says:

    Love this post. So real and so true. Just found out a friend was diagnosed with breast cancer. Forwarded on Hope Scarves website. But my goal is to never have to do that ever again…you are doing such good work…sending love and prayers.

    Reply

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