In October 2017, I felt a small, hard mass sitting above my right breast. At first, I assumed it was a clogged milk duct from breastfeeding my 18-month-old son, Freddie. I tried hot showers and cold packs, but it didn't go away. While I wasn't overly concerned, I made a mental note to call my doctor. Just in case.
A few weeks later, on Halloween, I met with my primary care physician to review the results of my mammogram and biopsy. "You have breast cancer," she informed me. "But the good news is you caught it early and it's treatable." I sat on the exam table in disbelief as she explained my options.
After the appointment, I sat in my car and cried. Then I called my husband, Alex. "Just come home," he said softly. "We'll figure it out."
My breast cancer diagnosis ended up being early onset and estrogen receptor-positive (ER+), meaning I wouldn't need chemotherapy. After many discussions with my oncologist and with women I met through a survivor network, I chose to have a unilateral mastectomy with reconstruction surgery, rather than a lumpectomy with radiation treatment. Less than six weeks after my diagnosis, I said goodbye to the body I'd known-and the breasts that had nursed both my children.
My surgery was successful, and after I healed, my oncologist prescribed an adjuvant regimen that consisted of a 10-year targeted hormone therapy to lower my risk for recurrence. He informed me that these treatments would push me into early menopause. At the time, the idea of menopause seemed abstract. I didn't know what it meant or what to expect. I was just happy my cancer was treatable and that I'd be alive to take my kids trick-or-treating the following year.
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Ready. Set. Grow.- Two-time olympian Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone has mastered the art of the game face
Olympic gold medalist Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone has cleared many hurdles on the way to her best self, both physically and mentally. Here, the 24-yearold reveals her winning strategies for nurturing her body and quieting her mind.
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Ozempic's Surprising Superpower - weight-loss medicines are also the most promising option I've seen for a drug that could treat addiction, whether to alcohol, opioids, or nicotine.
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