Las Vegas Review-Journal

Our bodies not always ourselves

We talk to four women about the physical and emotional scars that breast cancer leaves behind

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

KTrolia has already decided: The theme of her birthday party next September will be “50 and Perky.” Trolia giggles when she says it, grasping for the humorous moments in a life lived with stage 4 metastatic breast cancer. Four weeks out from a double mastectomy, Trolia is still shocked and, at times, saddened when she catches a glimpse of her nude self in the mirror.

Scars replace her nipples, and breast extenders, which stretch Trolia’s skin to prepare her for reconstruc­tive surgery, give her breasts a rectangula­r appearance. She plans to undergo reconstruc­tive surgery in the next year and is deciding whether she’ll tattoo nipples over the scars — or maybe the Vegas Golden Knights logo, she joked.

The biggest change for her, she said, was transformi­ng from a big-breasted woman to a smallchest­ed one.

“It’s not that my boobs were perfect, but they were still my boobs,” Trolia said from her Las Vegas home Wednesday.

“(A double mastectomy is) a very personal decision for a woman to make.”

October marks Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and the Review-journal asked four women how losing their breasts to cancer impacted their body image and femininity.

Overwhelmi­ngly, women came out of the experience radiating with positivity. They may not have their breasts — some, like Trolia, lost other organs such as ovaries and her uterus — but in exchange, they have their lives.

“Cancer picked on the wrong person. It doesn’t know who it picked a fight with,” Trolia said.

Preventing a diagnosis

Beth Giovannett­i, 51, was wellacquai­nted with cancer. Family on her mom’s side had been diagnosed with breast cancer; her mom died of a brain tumor when Giovannett­i was 12.

Her history made her a perfect candidate for genetic testing, but even when results came back positive for a mutation on the ATM gene, which is associated with an increased risk of certain cancers, Giovannett­i at first didn’t understand the

MASTECTOMY

I think particular­ly as women, in our culture our physical appearance is very tied into our self-esteem and our identity, and so thinking about removing a part of me was a very strange line of thought. Breast cancer survivor

implicatio­ns.

“I was thinking, ‘OK, I’m just one of those people who needs to be extremely careful or really carefully followed,’” she recalled thinking. Giovannett­i’s doctor told her the options were limited. Either the 51-year-old would need to undergo chemothera­py — that, statistica­lly, would cut her chance of developing cancer from 75 percent to 65 percent, doctors told her — or she’d lose her breasts.

“I was kind of blown away,” Giovannett­i remembers. “I wasn’t prepared for (mastectomy) as a preventati­ve option.”

She was nervous at first.

“I think particular­ly as women, in our culture our physical appearance is very tied into our self-esteem and our identity, and so thinking about removing a part of me was a very strange line of thought,” she said.

About six weeks ago, Giovannett­i went under the knife. Because the surgery was performed as a preventati­ve measure — a procedure brought to the public eye by

Angelina Jolie, who, witnessing her mother’s slow battle with cancer, underwent a double mastectomy in 2013 — Giovannett­i kept her nipples. She’ll receive breast reconstruc­tion in the coming months.

She’s hopeful women will talk to their doctors about their cancer risks. She’s hopeful they’ll talk to each other, too.

“It’s kind of a taboo subject,” Giovannett­i said. “I think the more we speak about it, we will over time see occurence and diagnosis —

God willing — decrease.”

Changing relationsh­ips

Camille Motley was 45 with a 5-year-old son when doctors said the lump in her right breast was cancerous.

She had to stay alive for him, she remembers.

“I wanted to take absolutely every measure to prolong my life,” said Motley, now 48, and a teacher at

P.A. Owens Christian Academy. She tested positive for the BRCA1 gene mutation, which increases the risk of breast and ovarian cancer, as well as pancreatic cancer. “Hearing that I had the mutation, that started to make me lean toward having not only a mastectomy, but a double mastectomy.”

She wasn’t so worried about her appearance, but she worried what her husband would think.

That’s not an uncommon fear, said Margo Otto, a social worker at Comprehens­ive Cancer Centers of Nevada, who leads a support group for breast cancer survivors.

“They’re worried about how their relationsh­ips could change, like with their partner,” Otto said. “As women, there’s … a lot of focus in terms of our body image on breasts.”

Motley’s husband didn’t mind. If she wanted reconstruc­tion, she’d be the “bionic woman,” she remembers him saying.

“Once I got used to just having these mounds up top, I’m OK with

my image,” Motley said, adding that she doesn’t mind being able to buy blouses a size down now. “Don’t fear.”

A personal decision

Melissa Tolentino, 50, faced death head-on when an infection that started in her IV port spread throughout her body. Tolentino had already fought off stage 3 breast cancer at 41 and was battling a sarcoma diagnosis.

Three years later and in remission, Tolentino has lost her breasts twice.

“I felt ugly,” Tolentino remembers of her double mastectomy and, later, the removal of her right reconstruc­ted breast. “Not whole as a woman.”

She cares less now. Maybe it’s her age or the reassuranc­e of her husband, whom she’d just begun dating when she was first diagnosed with cancer nine years ago.

Her children, 25, 18 and 16, have asked her to avoid another surgery, for her own safety. Doctors told Tolentino that reconstruc­ting the breast again would necessitat­e a seven-hour procedure, so for now she wears a prosthesis in her bra.

Tolentino reminds women undergoing mastectomi­es that they have options for regaining a sense of normalcy when their breasts come off.

“Whether you choose to reconstruc­t or not, that’s your option. Everyone feels differentl­y,” she said. She had areolas tattooed over the scars on her reconstruc­ted breasts, which she said made the process easier.

“It looked like nothing had ever changed,” she said.

Contact Jessie Bekker at jbekker@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4563. Follow @jessiebekk­s on Twitter.

 ?? Caroline Brehman ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @carolinebr­ehman Kelly Trolia was diagnosed with stage 4 metastatic breast cancer in June 2017 and had a mastectomy four weeks ago. She plans on reconstruc­tive surgery.
Caroline Brehman Las Vegas Review-journal @carolinebr­ehman Kelly Trolia was diagnosed with stage 4 metastatic breast cancer in June 2017 and had a mastectomy four weeks ago. She plans on reconstruc­tive surgery.
 ??  ?? Melissa Tolentino was diagnosed with breast cancer in her early 40s.
Melissa Tolentino was diagnosed with breast cancer in her early 40s.

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