Karen wasted no time in implementing a breast cancer awareness effort
within Harris County Government. Her initial contact with County
Attorney Michael J. Fleming led to an opportunity to appear before Commissioners’
Court and accept a Resolution designating
October 2, 1999 as Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure® Day in Houston,
so she contacted all the large County agencies to identify their employees
who are breast cancer survivors and invite them to join her as part of
the “delegation.”
“We came into Court in late September about 20 strong,” Karen said.
“Some had been diagnosed as recently as three months ago, but there were
some ‘seasoned’ survivors among us, too, including one woman diagnosed
32 years ago. There was nothing maudlin about this visit. I
think that, like me, the other women discovered a sense of connecting...of
support and encouragement and understanding that was really energizing.
It was good for us ‘newcomers’ to meet long-term survivors.”

“One of the common problems -- or, I guess you could call it a complaint
-- is that breast cancer is so isolating. After the diagnosis, when
everything kind of implodes, you have such a sense of being alone.
You want to know why this is happening to you, but verbalizing the question
seems like whining. You re-live your life in your mind, searching
for things you might have done -- or not done -- that committed you to
this path. When you are finally ready to talk about your disease,
the people who already know about the diagnosis are treating you with kid
gloves, afraid of prying or offending you. Others want to reassure
with stories of their friends and family members who are survivors.
But, this time, it’s your body...your life at risk.”
“Then,” she continued, “as you begin treatment you take yet another
step across the dividing line. While your medical support team, family
and friends are encouraging and supportive, they have no way of imagining
the paralyzing fear that grips you in the middle of a sentence or suffocates
you awake at night. Then, as you have mentally armed yourself for
the fight ahead, you realize that there are people who know what you’re
going through, what you’re feeling. They’re the young, the old, the
black, the white, the brown...the women who have been initiated against
their will into the ‘sisterhood’ of breast cancer victims who know exactly
what you’re feeling. They understand the anger, the bewilderment,
the fear and -- by their own success in defying the odds -- they help give
you the strength to look your own mortality squarely in the face and fight
to survive.”
“This was the way we felt that morning at Commissioners’ Court.
Joining our group of survivors was the wife of one of ‘them’ -- Commissioner
Jerry Eversole’s wife Pat (right, in black dress, behind her husband) --
which reinforced the fact that there are no magic bullets against this
disease. I think we were all quite touched when Judge Robert Eckels
and Commissioner Eversole gave each of us a red rose on behalf of the Commissioners.
The Resolution went straight to the heart of the issue by pointing out
that of the 13,000 Harris County employees and retirees, 44 percent of
them are women who will benefit from breast cancer education, screening
and treatment projects funded through the Komen Race for the Cure.
The Resolution urged everyone --
especially Harris County employees -- to join the fight against breast
cancer by supporting and participating in this event.”
“As we left the meeting that day, I think we all shared a renewed sense
of accomplishment. We are, after all, survivors. But, I was
also buoyed by the growing army of contacts we were assembling to recruit
for a breast cancer awareness effort of our own. It was sort of like
that old commercial -- ‘I told two friends, and they told two friends,
and they told two friends...’ and so on. I am constantly amazed at
the number of people who have heard about what we’re trying to do and have
come forward with offers of funding and support. And now, we could
put faces with some of the survivors, too.”
Saturday, October 2 dawned clear and a little cooler -- a welcome break
from Houston’s relentless heat that had stubbornly spilled into Autumn.
Houston Northwest Medical Center’s Breast Center provided two buses to
transport a group of 50 or more women down to the Galleria area, the site
for the 9th annual Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation RACE FOR THE
CURE®. The event -- a women only 5K (3.1 miles) Run/Walk along
with a One Mile Family Walk for everyone -- attracts competitive and recreational
runners, walkers, breast cancer survivors, individuals commemorating a
loved one who fought or is fighting a breast cancer battle, and people
who support this worthwhile cause. Race day proceeds, together with
corporate sponsorships and individual contributions, are used to fund local
breast cancer education, screening and treatment projects as well as the
Komen Foundation’s National Grants Program.
Karen’s neighbor, Jimmie Sue Francis, who was diagnosed
with breast cancer shortly after Karen was, wore the official Komen pink
shirt and cap, while Karen sported Houston Northwest Medical Center’s version.
Since its formation eight years ago, Komen’s Houston Affiliate has granted
nearly $1.8 million for research and community outreach programs.
Thanks to these grants, the Harris County Hospital District was able to
purchase a Stereotactic Breast Biopsy Unit for BenTaub General Hospital
to support early diagnosis of breast cancer.
The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center received a grant
to purchase a mobile mammography van, and funding was allocated for the
Mobile Mammography Program to provide free mammograms for underserved women.
Komen Foundation funding also helped underwrite tamoxifen trials and other
breast cancer research. Additional grants were given to The Rose,
for screening and diagnostic procedures for at-risk, low income and medically
underserved women through the Breast Care Sponsorship Program; to the Hispanic
Breast Cancer Education Awareness and Screening Program; and to various
other local institutions for funding for mammograms and education for minority
populations and research. (For additional information, visit http://www.breastcancerinfo.com;
http://www.komen.org;
or http://www.raceforthecure.com.)
“I had been warned that I would experience some pretty powerful emotions
at this event,” Karen admitted. “But, even so, I was completely unprepared
for the gamut of feelings -- from tears to joy. I was overwhelmed
by the sea of women -- about 15,000 of us -- standing shoulder to shoulder,
heel to toe in the early morning hours, all caught up in our own individual
thoughts about how breast cancer had touched our lives.
Many of us -- easily identified by our pink hats -- celebrated our survival.
For those who proudly wore the name of a women in whose memory they walked,
we cried unashamedly and offered our heartfelt sympathy. And, for
those who joined us that morning just because they wanted to show their
support and concern, we silently shouted, ‘thank you.’ This was yet
another event in which I was grateful to have my daughters join me.”
“When we boarded the buses for home, we were exhilarated and tired all
at the same time. We knew that additional funding for research would
result from what we had done that morning, and I think we all felt the
synergism. The sum of the parts was certainly greater the whole in
this case, and we shared a sense of accomplishment.”
Karen has been accepting an increasing number of invitations to address
local groups and organizations. In sharing her experience with breast
cancer, she is quite successful in persuading other women to finally get
the mammograms they had been putting off. She takes a small mini-breast
with her and has people feel for the lump. If they don’t find it, she tells
them to keep feeling around until they do. It feels, she says, exactly
like the lump she discovered in her own breast. Even at the office,
Karen prompts officers and visitors to do the “exam” for themselves.

Recently, after a long-awaited visit with her son Keith in San Francisco,
it was time for her annual check up and mammogram. She didn’t expect
her reaction to this procedure.
“I knew it was something I had to do,” she acknowledged, “but I was
astonished by the fear that ambushed me. I was really up-tight about
it. I told the mammographer that while I realized it would probably hurt,
to go ahead and do whatever was necessary to get a good reading.
I was insistent about knowing the results of the test immediately; I was
panicked about having to wait to know if I was OK.”
“Fortunately, they shared the results quickly and although they saw
some scar tissue, they found nothing else of concern. I’ll have another
mammogram in six months to check that out. I’m feeling tired again,
though,” Karen admitted. “By the end of the day, I’m just dragging.
I asked my radiologist about this and she said perhaps I had done too much
too soon. That’s probably true. I was so caught up in managing
the treatment and staying active on the job, that I hadn’t really listened
to my body, as I have said. I’m doing that more now. When I
get tired now, I stop and rest. I don’t have to be superwoman, deflecting
the bullets of everyday life with my wristbands. Hey! I’m only
human after all.”
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