What a great story!! I read your article while sitting in a doctors office with my husband and started crying and said "wow"-so this is why I do Relay every year-as a 13 year breast cancer survivor.
Sometimes those of us who are blessed to be long term survivors and volunteer with ACS to help put on this wonderful event, forget what it means to those 1st time survivors who are just coming to grips with what they have been thru.
Cancer is still a very Scary word and our goal is to get rid of it by 2015, Do able? Maybe-but with HOPE everything is possible.
God Bless you Steve and your family, but most of all your Mother-Moms know Best.
Mary Gilbert
McDonough, GA
I Had A ‘Legitimate Cancer’
Sometimes—if you listen to your mother and the people you grew up with—you can go home again.
Email To A Friend
Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.
On Jan. 12, 2007, I found what would turn out to be a malignant cancer in my left testicle. I went through surgery, radiation, missed three months of work, gained 20 pounds—and became an instant fan of Lance Armstrong. I survived, but I went through hell, emotionally and physically. When it was clear I was OK, my mom decided that maybe I hadn't been through enough yet, so she signed me up for something called the Relay For Life, a cancer fundraising walk in my Appalachian hometown of Millboro, Va. In my post-cancer euphoria, I agreed, and one warm spring weekend I drove from Washington, D.C., with my two kids, Grace and Joseph.
When I found my mom on the lawn of the host school, she handed me a packet that included a bright purple T-shirt. "You need to wear this so they'll know you're a survivor," she said. I changed the subject. We made small talk for a while, and I went to the concession stand looking for comfort in the form of something southern fried. My mom started to get restless; the march time was approaching, and she could see I had cold feet. Finally, I broke it to her: "Mom, I've decided I'll just watch. These are people who still have life-threatening illnesses, and I don't deserve to walk with them." Truth is, I was just embarrassed.
This didn't go over well. My mom is 5 foot 3, but somehow she manages to tower over her husband and two sons, and we're all taller than 6 foot. She pointed her finger at me and said: "Now you listen to me. You had a legitimate cancer! You get that shirt on this instant and get out there and march!" "Yes, ma'am," I said.
I prayed that the shirt wouldn't fit, but it did, and it turns out that at a cancer walk, the stars are the people in the purple, the survivor color. I was like Frosty the Snowman putting on his magic hat. I had VIP status. People looked at me differently, and it made me extremely uncomfortable. "Look! There's one!" they all seemed to say. "Isn't that Bill and Joyce's boy?"
All too soon, the megaphone person announced, "All survivors need to gather inside the school!" So I went in, milling around with my purple-shirted brethren in what looked like a room usually filled with happy country kids eating Tater Tots and drinking chocolate milk. I wanted to be transported back to that age, back to the good ol' days when tall boys like me were tall enough to jump up and write our names on the old cafeteria's asbestos ceiling. (And I wonder how I got cancer?)
But it was 2007, not 1972, and I felt unworthy, and young, even though I was in my mid-40s. Most of the survivors were much older than I was, and a lot of them knew me when I was a kid and a reporter on the local newspaper. The men huddled on one side of the room, the women on the other. I found myself in a tight circle of guys, and, naturally, we compared cancers, like old soldiers comparing battle scars. When my turn came, I said, "testicular," which I always say in a hushed tone. I've watched a lot of men's faces when I lay that word on them, and they all do the same thing: involuntarily squint an eye, quickly inhale, then flash a Thank-God-That's-Not-Me look while simultaneously performing the surreptitious in-pocket jewel check.
The hour was growing near for our march. The idea was that we'd all walk around the temporary track a few times as a group and the town folk would stand along the edge and watch us. When you walked near your family or an old friend, they'd clap and yell until you lapped back around—and then they'd do it again. It was sort of like what a shy person like me might think going to hell would be like, only there you wouldn't have to wear purple t-shirts.
- 1
- 2
- Next Page »







