South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Life's Victories

Celebratin­g Eleven Years of Breast Cancer Survivorsh­ip

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Life is short no matter how much

Carole Cohen

The Diagnosis

In July 2016, I was diagnosed during a routine mammogram. I was called back that day for several more routine tests, but I knew something was wrong.

Sharing the News

I am the mother of four girls. My oldest daughter who lived in New York was fighting cancer. Her three sisters at the time of diagnosis were with her. She died Aug. 26. My mastectomy was Aug. 31. One daughter who was a nurse came back to Florida to help me.

Choosing Treatment

I had a mastectomy of the right breast.

There were lesions in too many places. I had chemothera­phy. One of the most difficult parts was holding my breath on every follow-up visit wondering when the other shoe would drop. It was hard losing my breast, gaining a lot of weight because of medication­s, and wondering if my boyfriend would still be there.

The process was crazy complicate­d with many failed surgeries. I had over 10 surgeries that first year. The 2010 cancer recurrence treatment offered up more surgeries, four months of aggressive chemo and 26 days of radiation.

How I Got Through

The nurses at the infusion center in Delray were all great, but Julie, a physician's assistant, was my hero. She sat with me for as long as I needed, listened to me, and cared about me. I had good friends and talked to people who survived.

What I Learned

$ # the doctor alone. Take someone who $ #

told to do. Laugh as much as you can. All things pass. Worrying won't change the outcome. This wasn't only my illness: My daughter, three husbands, and best friends died of cancer. All I can do is raise money to fight this brutal disease.

Look for more inspiratio­nal stories in the Sun Sentinel throughout the month of October.

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