Cancer “Free”

Last week while visiting Phoenix I met a delightful Mayo Clinic technician who was so cheerful I had to do this — I asked her why she was so bubbly.  Her response:  I was diagnosed with colon cancer at 36 with three children, a single mom.

The process of facing her treatment and the uncertainty around it turned out to be a freeing thing for her – she says she never worries about a recurrence — she lives each day as if it was going to be her last day.

One benefit that she shared is that she works hard to balance her job as a tech with her role as a mom and her other interests.

It took something bad to bring so much good – just randomly meeting her reminded me that you don’t have to wait for a dire diagnosis to free yourself to live the life you really want.

As broadcaster and journalist John Diamond observed during his battle with throat cancer:

“Cancer is a word, not a sentence. Surviving it doesn’t just let you live — it teaches you how.”

Pass it along.