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Breast Cancer: The Wake-Up Call

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Monday, October 24th, 2016
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The gun went off, signifying the start of the 5-mile road race on Mother’s Day weekend in May 2016 — and for a moment, I could not move.

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A pain in my back, more devastating than anything I had ever felt, held me back. But I pushed past it.

As a breast cancer survivor and world-class triathlete with a slot in the September 2016 ITU World Triathlon Championships in Cozumel, Mexico, I was used to pain. Nothing was going to stop me from running this race.

Everyone shot past me; my body wasn’t cooperating. Still, quitting wasn’t an option. I’d overcome “insurmountable” challenges numerous times in my life through sheer determination. I would finish this race no matter what.

My pace slowed, and eventually I could only walk. Each step was excruciatingly painful, but I put on a happy face, telling everyone I was fine.

After “beating” breast cancer and then rising to the top in triathlon competition — even breaking a world record — I’d become an “overcomer.” My book, Just Three Words, had recently been published, and it was healing and inspiring thousands.

How could I admit something was wrong when so many people looked up to me?

A Life of Hiding

The skill of hiding my feelings began early. I suffered intense teasing and bullying in elementary and middle school, and the negative words from others pummeled my self-worth. Ultimately, the ridicule became unnecessary, as the critical voice inside took over.

In high school, I nearly died from anorexia. I miraculously recovered, only to fall into bulimia in college. My fixation on food led to earning a bachelor’s in dietetics and a master’s in clinical nutrition.

I became a registered dietitian and have helped hundreds through their eating disorders, but for 25 years or more, I suffered in silence with my own. Cloaked in shame, my secret flourished in the darkness, ruining my life.

The Courage to Come Out

It was a diagnosis of advanced breast cancer at age 46 that gave me the courage to begin the long walk out of the dark abyss — to come clean and be healed.

Facing death again — and my fragile humanness through years of chemotherapy, radiation, and multiple surgeries — helped open me to love. It enabled me to throw off the shackles of shame and realize what a blessing life is, how magnificent our bodies are, and how vital we all are to this world.

I believed that I would lose everything if I dared to be vulnerable and expose it all, but I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Sharing my shame and secrets, embracing my own imperfections, and trusting others to allow them, too, was medicine as potent as my chemo cocktail. I have not once gone back to an eating disorder since.

 

One Response

  1. Sharing everything that you are experiencing would really help you deal with your problem. Just don’t be afraid and always be positive.

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