Tag: cancer survivor



15 Dec 09

Lance Armstrong is the ultimate athlete, a cancer survivor, who dominated the most brutally intense event in sports. Armstrong won seven consecutive Tours from 1999-2005, He not only made history, erasing previous records, he revolutionized cycling.

By doing so, Lance Armstrong became one of the most controversial athletes in his sport. His athletic prowess was so unbelievable that it divided mere mortals into two camps: those he inspired against those who suspect that he must have been doping.

With Armstrong, it all comes down to belief. No one believes in Armstrong more strongly than Armstrong himself. Of everything, that was perhaps his most vital winning ingredient.

A modest, fatherless childhood and being written off as an athlete when cancer doctors gave him less than a 50/50 chance of living left Armstrong with a chip on his shoulder as large as his native Texas. “I’ll show ‘em” could be his motto. More than merely competitive, Armstrong thrives on confrontation. Deadly illness, dizzying mountain climbs, accusations of doping, perceived slights from other riders — all these and more he burned as fuel to power his intense drive.

His first post-op words to the surgeon who removed tumors from his brain, according to the cyclist, were “I can kick your ass on a bike any day.”

At the Tour, the most ferocious demonstration of his implacable will came in the mist-cooled Pyrenees in 2003, when his winning streak brushed within a whisker of a premature end. Accelerating uphill away from his rivals, Armstrong shaved too close to the roadside crowds and snagged his handlebar on a spectator’s bag, slamming him to the ground.

Riders with less steel and less luck — Armstrong was fortunate not to break a bone — might have thrown up their hands in despair. Not him. His eyes burning charcoal black with fury, Armstrong jumped back on his bike and powered past everyone, rescuing what until then had been a sub-par race for him. Of the Tours he won, that was the only one where he showed hints of vulnerability.

“Everyone has a bad day, an off day but Lance is that well trained that it never happens to him. Hats off,” says 13-time Tour veteran Stuart O’Grady. “For seven years, to never fall sick, to never have (a serious) accident. The level of professionalism that he’s shown has made cycling that much bigger. Armstrong is a superstar, a celebrity in all aspects of life.”

Passing years, wealth, fame, fatherhood and traveling the world smoothed some of Armstrong’s abrasiveness. As much as he showed a mean streak on the bike, he has shown compassion off it, throwing himself into campaigning against cancer with the same zeal he once reserved for cycling. But even as he developed a taste for modern art, populated gossip pages and rubbed shoulders with presidents and pop stars, the need to prove himself still smoldered under his tailored suits.

After his last win in 2005, Armstrong announced that he was “100 percent retired” and that “it would take an absolute miracle to bring me back.” In fact, it took less than that in 2008 — just a belief that his successors weren’t worthy and that he could still be a contender, and anger that doping accusations had followed him into retirement.

“I’m doing this for my kids,” he told biographer John Wilcockson, explaining his comeback. “I don’t want them growing up and reading all these things about me and doping.”

Yet nothing Armstrong does will silence the suspicions. They appear destined for perpetual limbo, with Armstrong unable to prove he was clean — short of spending 24/7, 365 days a year under constant surveillance, who could? — and his accusers unable so far to produce incontrovertible evidence he was dirty.

It’s an unsatisfactory situation that bothers even some of those who know, like and respect him. Prince Albert II of Monaco, a member of the International Olympic Committee, says Armstrong wouldn’t be his athlete of the decade because of the doubts.

“Obviously you can also argue, ‘OK, maybe he took something a few years ago and then now how could he be on something after winning the battle against cancer? How could he afford simply health-wise to be on any kind of drugs?’ But he still had results after that, incredible ones,” the prince told the AP. “It is a very tricky one.”

What is certain is that five of the eight riders who shared the Tour podium with Armstrong in his winning years served doping bans at some point in their careers. Another two were allegedly tied to doping rings. Armstrong was the leader among a sullied bunch.

Armstrong’s laserlike focus on the Tour, building his year and team toward that sole goal, had no equal. His attention to detail and use of new technology raised standards in cycling. In spring training, on empty, rain-soaked roads and snow-blocked mountain passes, Armstrong methodically reconnoitered the route, planning where he would strike during the three Tour weeks in July. Traditionalists in France huffed at Armstrong’s “American” ways, bridling that he steamrollered over their beloved race without the off-the-cuff panache of a rider like Eddy “The Cannibal” Merckx, whom Armstrong calls the greatest cyclist ever.

But, in doing so, the French also paid Armstrong a strange backhanded compliment, because only those at very top draw such emotion in this nation of revolution.

“The French public doesn’t like people who win,” says Jean-Francois Pescheux, who as competition director for the Tour designs the route. “The first year, they’re happy. The second year, less so and at the third, they have had enough.”







2 Nov 09

Gary Howell is a cancer survivor. He participated in the Breast Cancer Fund’s 2009 Climb Against the Odds trek up Mt. Shasta in California. Hutchens Cancer Prevention feels that this article by Mr. Howell is so important in spreading information about the need to focus on prevention that we quoted it in its entirety.

The month of October is Breast Cancer Awareness month. There have been numerous articles, events, fundraisers and television programs oriented toward this theme and many of them feature the term “cure” prominently in the title.

Certainly a cure for breast cancer would be a welcome occasion, but this focus unfortunately can mask the many avenues of breast cancer prevention that are already documented; many are already available to women and some need additional research and/or legislation.

Between 1973 and 1998, the incidence of breast cancer in the U.S. increased by more than 40 percent. In 2008, an estimated 250,000 U.S. women were diagnosed with breast cancer and 40,500 died of the disease.

Clearly something is happening to cause this increase. Women need to be informed about risk factors that have developed during this 25-year period and we all need to work together to eliminate them. I would like to emphasize this point by illustrating it with a very personal example.

My wife, Nancy, reached menopause at the relatively early age of 42 and experienced the array of annoying symptoms that often characterize this event; hot flashes and moodiness being the most acute. Like so many women, she embarked on a regimen of hormone replacement therapy, or HRT, and the symptoms disappeared.

Nancy’s mother began menopause at that same age and took HRT for 34 years without event. Being her mother’s daughter, she followed her footsteps. There is no history of breast cancer in her family; but in the United States, where a woman’s lifetime risk of developing breast cancer is an alarming 1 in 8, no more than 1 in 10 women with breast cancer has a genetic history of the disease!

Nancy is one of the fortunate women whose routine mammogram screening revealed the cancer in its earliest stage before a palpable lump had developed and before the cancer spread to the lymph system. Following a regimen of chemotherapy and radiation, the odds are very good that Nancy’s cancer will not return.

I can assure you, however, that Nancy would have gladly disabused herself of the benefits of HRT in favor of avoiding the exhausting and painful treatments that were prescribed.

An estimated 80,000 synthetic chemicals have been registered for use in the United States in the last 40 years, but fewer than 10 percent of them have been fully tested for their effects on human health. Scientific evidence links toxic chemicals and radiation in our every day environment to the high rates of breast cancer. Some of this exposure is from seemingly benign sources such as cosmetics, beauty creams, sunscreen lotions, plastics and foodstuffs containing artificial hormones and additives.

We must:

* Educate ourselves and our loved ones about risky behaviors.

Some suggested links on the internet are:

http://www.breastcancerfund.org

http://www.safecosmetics.org

http://www.healthandenvironment.org

* Become involved in the legislative process. Three suggested links are:

Massachusetts Breast Cancer Coalition, http://www.1in8@mbcc.org

National Women’s Health Network, http://www.womenshealthnetwork.org

Jane Cusumono Foundation, http://chateauwallyfilms.com/breastcancerresources.htm

This month, when you notice pink ribbons in the grocery and department stores, and football players, golfers and politicians wearing pink, keep in mind that we not only need a cure for breast cancer, but remember also that prevention is so much easier than treating this devastating disease.


Is Prevention the Cure for Cancer?