Friday 11 March 2011

Finding the Will to Go on After a Cancer Diagnosis

Melissa Brumbelow has written a wonderful book about all her experiences from when she was told she had breast cancer in March of 2009, up until she had her final procedure. She has now begun her website, Perky Mutant, where she shares her experiences for everyone who was just diagnosed, already under care and those that know and love anyone with this debilitating disease.
Imagine you are 28 years old, rocking a sexy new business suit from work, heading to meet your studly husband as soon as the next appointment for the day is over for date night, and you're as healthy as a horse. That next appointment is the annual visit to the OB-GYN. Every woman just loves that yearly check-up. Y'all know the one I'm talking about - the one that includes stirrups, cattle prods, branding iron hot flashes, and what was once round is squished flatter than a pancake.
The above quote is how Melissa describes her first of many visits to her I love My OB-GYN All to Pieces doctor, and for her Oncologists; Honey Doc and Gospel Doc. She has "special" names for all of the wonderful people that helped her throughout this ideal that includes family and friends. Melissa describes her OB-GYN as the person who straps you to a table, places your feet high in stirrups, and uses tools on your body you would otherwise consider kinky.
Melissa goes on to describe how she came up with the name Perky Mutant, and if you read what's on the website, you'll certainly understand the reasoning behind this. You'll also discover ways in which she tried to overcome all of the procedures she went through. You'll also discover why she did what she did without having much choice in the matter - either have the procedure or die in two months!
Melissa underwent a new test called the BRCAnalysis Test (bra-ka), specifically for women with a lot of cancer in their families. Now, if you call having seventeen cases of cancer in the immediate family a high percentage, you'd be correct. After all of the bloodletting, her OB-GYN called telling me she wanted to give her the results which, weren't good. She tested 87 percent positive for breast cancer and 44 percent positive for ovarian cancer. She just wasn't ready to hear numbersthat were that ginormous!

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