Sunday Mirror

I thought it tum was ju pregnancy stretch mar but it was s cancer mo

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Over the next few weeks I’d cry over everything.

And I kept staring blankly at things, over and over again, just thinking, “I’m going to die.”

I remembered how a mole on my stomach had become stupidly itchy when I was six months pregnant with Oliver.

My skin is very fair and I have lots of moles and freckles but they had never itched like that before.

And whenever I showered, the rest of my skin would turn pink from the heat but there would always be a white ring around the mole on my belly.

But I ignored it because I thought it was just a symptom of my belly stretching and changing with pregnancy.

I gravely regret that decision to ignore it now. But, luckily, I did not ignore it for ever.

Months after having Oliver, the itching had not stopped and it still had a white ring around the area whenever I showered.

Then I started to worry. I knew then that it wasn’t normal.

I went to my GP, they looked at it through the microscope and said, “We’ll take it off.”

They carved and scraped it off that day but then I had to wait another two weeks for the outcome of the tests. When the results arrived, my GP rang and told me to come in straight away, which brought me to the surgery that day. He told me I had cancer as soon as I sat down.

But we caught it when it was still a superficia­l melanoma.

My doctor told me I may have saved my own life when I walked into the surgery a fortnight earlier.

If I had ignored the warning signs, five years down the line it probably would have gone deeper into my body and spread to my bones. My dad had malignant melanoma which, luckily, he caught too before it had spread.

He always told me to check my moles – and to get them checked by a doctor if I ever noticed any changes to them.

I’m glad he told me because otherwise I may not have gone to the doctor when I did. I’ve had six moles removed so far – including one on my neck and another on my thigh – and I have to go back for regular checks.

More will probably have to come off. But I’d rather have a thousand scars than cancer.

Now I don’t ever want to go on a sunshine holiday again. I’d rather go camping in the woods with my boys and partner Sam. I have very fair skin and when I was young oil wh regret

Now hat w and w happe notice please

Ear trip to save y

 ??  ?? DANGER SIGN Lauri’s tum mole PATCHED UP After visit to GP SCARRED Second mole was on thigh
DANGER SIGN Lauri’s tum mole PATCHED UP After visit to GP SCARRED Second mole was on thigh

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