October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (Full Version)

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DeviantlyD -> October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/1/2011 8:00:13 PM)

It's Breast Cancer Awareness Month! Wear a pink ribbon to show your support of making everyone aware of the need to end this disease. :)

My mother is a breast cancer survivor (twice) and I know of another special poster on these forums whose mother is also a survivor. :)

Although I don't know them by interaction, only reading their posts/profiles, I do know there are members of CollarMe who have fought this disease as well.

I also know a woman who has died from this. :(

While it isn't as common, men are susceptible to breast cancer too.

I love my boobies and want them to be healthy. And I hope you love your boobies and do what you can to keep them healthy too. :)




NocturnalStalker -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/1/2011 10:05:18 PM)

October is also diabetes month.  




Endivius -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/1/2011 11:44:44 PM)

I support Breast Cancer Research Center Of America, because a breast is a terrible thing to waste. Save 'em all I say.




DeviantlyD -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/2/2011 12:17:35 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: NocturnalStalker

October is also diabetes month.  


*sigh* No, that's in November.




Aylee -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/2/2011 12:49:13 PM)

SAVE SECOND BASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

WOOT!
quote:

ORIGINAL: DeviantlyD

It's Breast Cancer Awareness Month! Wear a pink ribbon to show your support of making everyone aware of the need to end this disease. :)

My mother is a breast cancer survivor (twice) and I know of another special poster on these forums whose mother is also a survivor. :)

Although I don't know them by interaction, only reading their posts/profiles, I do know there are members of CollarMe who have fought this disease as well.

I also know a woman who has died from this. :(

While it isn't as common, men are susceptible to breast cancer too.

I love my boobies and want them to be healthy. And I hope you love your boobies and do what you can to keep them healthy too. :)





kalikshama -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 9:46:25 AM)

And every year I say why the hell don't we focus more on prevention than detection?

'Zeneca, the originator of Breast Cancer Awareness month is the manufacturer of carcinogenic petrochemicals, carcinogenic pollutants, and a breast cancer drug that causes at least four different types of cancer in women, including breast cancer. I ask you to stop and think, "Is something wrong with this picture?"'

http://innerself.com/content/articles/health/diseases-a-conditions/cancer/4624-breast-cancer-deception-by-sherrill-sellman.html

Every October since 1985, pink ribbons are displayed in posters, magazine advertisements, and proudly adorn women's lapels heralding Breast Cancer Awareness Month. The multitudes of runs, hikes, walks, and other fundraising events raise hundred of millions of dollars to conquer that dreaded scourge of the modern woman, breast cancer. High profile companies like Avon, Lee Denim, and Revlon have joined ranks along with the Susan G. Komen Foundation's "Race for the Cure", and the City of Hope Hospital's "Walk for Hope". Popular celebrities lead the charge.

Each year, 180,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer and 44,000 will die of the disease. The US has one of the highest breast cancer rates in the world. Fifty years ago the incidence of Breast Cancer for a woman's lifetime risk was one in twenty. Now it has skyrocketed to one in eight. Clearly the so-called war on cancer has not even made a dent in the breast cancer epidemic as the rates continue to climb at the rate of one per cent per year.

The motto of Breast Cancer Awareness Month is "Early Detection is Your Best Protection". The National Cancer Institute stated in 1995 that "Breast cancer is simply not a preventable disease". This tune was reiterated in 1997 by the American Cancer Society who also announced that "there are no practical ways to prevent breast cancer -- only early detection."1 So mammograms are the front line of defense. Celebrities like Rosie O'Donnell offer free t-shirts with the honorable words "I've Been Squished" if you'll make a date with your local x-ray department.

So let's all join in and wave our pink ribbons and don those running shoes and take to the roads, right? Wait! Before you get swept up by the emotional frenzy of this call to arms, there is something you should know.

Who Profits from Breast Cancer?

Breast Cancer Awareness month's primary sponsor and mastermind of the event in 1985 was Zeneca Pharmaceuticals, now known as AstraZeneca. Zeneca is the company that manufactures the controversial and widely prescribed breast cancer drug, Tamoxifen. Did you know all TV, radio, and print media campaigns are paid for and must be approved by Zeneca.

It is less known that Zeneca also makes herbicides and fungicides. One of their products, the organochlorine pesticide, Acetochlor is implicated as a causal factor in breast cancer. Its Perry Ohio chemical plant is the third largest source of potential cancer causing pollution in the U.S., spewing 53,000 pounds of recognized carcinogens into the air in 1996.2

Why The Breast Cancer Increase?

When it comes to environmental toxicity, carcinogens found in pesticides, herbicides, plastics, and other toxic chemicals that are known to cause cancer -- especially breast cancer -- there is booming silence by all Breast Cancer Awareness Month programs. Did the alarming increase of breast cancer rates just mysteriously happen? Or perhaps, the focus on the cure has conveniently ignored the cause? After, all it wouldn't really be good PR for Zeneca to have it known that their chemical products directly contribute to the breast cancer epidemic.

Many experts predicted as far back as 30 years ago that cancer rates would increase, citing an explosion of synthetic chemicals. From 1940 through the early 1980's, production of synthetic chemicals increased by a factor of 350.

Billions of tons of toxic substances that never existed are now released into the environment. Yet only 3 percent of the 75,000 chemicals in use have been tested for safety.3 These toxic time bombs are found in our water, air, and soil. Women who live near toxic waste dumps have 6.5 times the incidence of breast cancer.

A survey conducted by Dr. Mary Wolff of Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York found that women with breast cancer had four times the levels of DDE found in non-carcinogenic tumors.4 Also, another study investigated why upper class women in the community of Newton, Massachusetts had higher breast cancer rates than the lower economic women.5 The researchers attributed the increase to greater use of professional lawn care service and more dry cleaning.

Pesticides & Breast Cancer

The pesticide breast cancer link was stunningly highlighted in research from Israel which linked three organochlorine pesticides detected in dairy products to an increase of 12 types of cancer in 10 different strains of mice. After public outcry in 1978, the Israeli government was forced to ban the pesticides Benzene Hexachloride, DDT, and Lindane. Interestingly, breast cancer mortality rates which had increased every year for 25 years, dropped nearly 8 per cent for all age groups and dropped more than a thirty-three percent for women ages 25-34 in 1986.6

The American Cancer Society was founded with the support of the Rockefeller family in 1913. Members of the chemical and pharmaceutical industry have long had a place on its board. Could that have something to do with the fact that the American Cancer Society's latest report on cancer prevention makes no mention of environmental factors?

Tamoxifen: Cure or Cause?

Since Zeneca researched and patented the most popular breast cancer treatment, Tamoxifen, grossing 500 million dollars a year [Tamoxifen is actually the generic name. The brand name is Nolvadex.], perhaps we can forgive their involvement with carcinogenic chemicals... Perhaps not. On May 16th, 2000, the New York Times reported that the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences listed substances that are known to cause cancer. Tamoxifen was included in that list!!7

It is known that Tamoxifen causes uterine cancer, liver cancer, and gastro-intestinal cancer. After just two to three years of use, Tamoxifen will increase the incidence of uterine cancer by two to three times. The treatment for uterine cancer is a hysterectomy. In addition, Tamoxifen increased the risk of strokes, blood clots, eye damage, menopausal symptoms, and depression.

The biggest shock of all is the fact that Tamoxifen will increase the risk of breast cancer! The journal Science published a study from Duke University Medical Center in 1999 showing that after 2 - 5 years, Tamoxifen actually initiated the growth of breast cancer!

Zeneca: Two Sides to the Coin

So, Zeneca, the originator of Breast Cancer Awareness month is the manufacturer of carcinogenic petrochemicals, carcinogenic pollutants, and a breast cancer drug that causes at least four different types of cancer in women, including breast cancer. I ask you to stop and think, "Is something wrong with this picture?"

So, since the Breast Cancer Awareness Month spin doctors claim that breast cancer is "simply not a preventable disease", the focus has shifted to the theme of early detection. Women are now encouraged to get their early mammogram. At one time, only women 50 years or older were told to get this screening. Now the campaign is targeting 40 year olds and even women as young as 25. However, detecting breast cancer with mammography does not protect women from breast cancer.
Mammograms: Adding Injury to Insult!

More questions are being raised about the validity of mammograms. A mammogram is an x-ray. The only acknowledged cause of cancer by the American Cancer Society is from radiation. When it comes to radiation, there is no safe level of exposure.

"There is clear evidence that the breast, particularly in premenopausal women, is highly sensitive to radiation, with estimates of increased risk of up to one percent for every RAD (radiation absorbed dose) unit of x-ray exposure. Even for low dosage exposure of two RADs or less, this exposure can add up quickly for women having an annual mammography," notes Samuel Epstein, M.D., Professor of Occupational and Environmental Medicine at the University of Illinois School of Public Health. "More recent concern comes from evidence that one percent of women, or over one million women in the United States alone, carry a gene that increases their breast cancer risk from radiation fourfold."8

In addition, mammography provides false tumor reports of between 5 and 15 percent of the time. False positive results cause women to be re-exposed to additional X rays and create an environment of further stress, even possibly leading to unneeded surgery.

"Furthermore," says Dr. Epstein, "while there is a general consensus that mammography improves early cancer detection and survival in post-menopausal women, no such benefit is demonstrable for younger women." Still, the American Cancer Society recommends annual or biannual mammography for all women ages forty to fifty-five or earlier.

"Mammograms increase the risk for developing breast cancer and raise the risk of spreading or metastasizing an existing growth," says Dr. Charles B. Simone, a former clinical associate in immunology and pharmacology at the National Cancer Institute. Safer and even more effective diagnostic techniques like infrared thermography has been vigorously attacked by the Breast Cancer Awareness organizations.9

It is also noteworthy to point out that General Electric, a major polluter in PCB's in the Hudson River, N.Y. area, manufactures mammography machines.

So all the hullabaloo that comes each October, enlisting women's support and hard-earned cash does nothing to really eliminate the cause of this devastating disease. Instead, women's heart-felt desires and good intentions to find the cause and cure are usurped by the hidden agendas of major transnational corporations pushing their toxic drug treatments and diagnostic tools that are shown to contribute to even more breast cancer. It makes one wonder if the cancer establishment is really interested in a cure at all.

Can We Do Anything?

Women can make a difference. The causes of cancer are already known. Toxic diets, toxic lifestyles, toxic environments, toxic drug treatments, and toxic diagnostic techniques cause cancer. Corporations are only interested in increasing their profits and ensuring their tentacles of control, not in actual solutions. When it comes to Breast Cancer Awareness Month, women must invest their time and money into projects, initiatives, and treatments that will truly make a difference.

Perhaps it is time to turn in those pink ribbons.




Hillwilliam -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 10:26:54 AM)

*Makes a note to be aware of as many breasts as humanly possible this month*




Aylee -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 10:35:13 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam

*Makes a note to be aware of as many breasts as humanly possible this month*


Are you now a member of:

Breast Holders UNITE!


Promoting Weapons against Mammary Destruction


Nip(ple) Cancer in the Bud!


Treasure Chest Club!


Stop The War In My Rack!


If not you should join. [:)]



Checked Your Breasts Lately? Squeeze 'em while you can!







DeviantlyD -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 10:53:14 AM)

Way to take away from the spirit of this thread kalikshama. My mother is a breast cancer survivor. I celebrate the fact she is a survivor and is alive today, despite this foul disease. Your post detracts from that and I don't appreciate it. Start your own thread instead of taking away from mine.




LaTigresse -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 10:57:00 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: kalikshama

And every year I say why the hell don't we focus more on prevention than detection?

'Zeneca, the originator of Breast Cancer Awareness month is the manufacturer of carcinogenic petrochemicals, carcinogenic pollutants, and a breast cancer drug that causes at least four different types of cancer in women, including breast cancer. I ask you to stop and think, "Is something wrong with this picture?"'

http://innerself.com/content/articles/health/diseases-a-conditions/cancer/4624-breast-cancer-deception-by-sherrill-sellman.html

Every October since 1985, pink ribbons are displayed in posters, magazine advertisements, and proudly adorn women's lapels heralding Breast Cancer Awareness Month. The multitudes of runs, hikes, walks, and other fundraising events raise hundred of millions of dollars to conquer that dreaded scourge of the modern woman, breast cancer. High profile companies like Avon, Lee Denim, and Revlon have joined ranks along with the Susan G. Komen Foundation's "Race for the Cure", and the City of Hope Hospital's "Walk for Hope". Popular celebrities lead the charge.

Each year, 180,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer and 44,000 will die of the disease. The US has one of the highest breast cancer rates in the world. Fifty years ago the incidence of Breast Cancer for a woman's lifetime risk was one in twenty. Now it has skyrocketed to one in eight. Clearly the so-called war on cancer has not even made a dent in the breast cancer epidemic as the rates continue to climb at the rate of one per cent per year.

The motto of Breast Cancer Awareness Month is "Early Detection is Your Best Protection". The National Cancer Institute stated in 1995 that "Breast cancer is simply not a preventable disease". This tune was reiterated in 1997 by the American Cancer Society who also announced that "there are no practical ways to prevent breast cancer -- only early detection."1 So mammograms are the front line of defense. Celebrities like Rosie O'Donnell offer free t-shirts with the honorable words "I've Been Squished" if you'll make a date with your local x-ray department.

So let's all join in and wave our pink ribbons and don those running shoes and take to the roads, right? Wait! Before you get swept up by the emotional frenzy of this call to arms, there is something you should know.

Who Profits from Breast Cancer?

Breast Cancer Awareness month's primary sponsor and mastermind of the event in 1985 was Zeneca Pharmaceuticals, now known as AstraZeneca. Zeneca is the company that manufactures the controversial and widely prescribed breast cancer drug, Tamoxifen. Did you know all TV, radio, and print media campaigns are paid for and must be approved by Zeneca.

It is less known that Zeneca also makes herbicides and fungicides. One of their products, the organochlorine pesticide, Acetochlor is implicated as a causal factor in breast cancer. Its Perry Ohio chemical plant is the third largest source of potential cancer causing pollution in the U.S., spewing 53,000 pounds of recognized carcinogens into the air in 1996.2

Why The Breast Cancer Increase?

When it comes to environmental toxicity, carcinogens found in pesticides, herbicides, plastics, and other toxic chemicals that are known to cause cancer -- especially breast cancer -- there is booming silence by all Breast Cancer Awareness Month programs. Did the alarming increase of breast cancer rates just mysteriously happen? Or perhaps, the focus on the cure has conveniently ignored the cause? After, all it wouldn't really be good PR for Zeneca to have it known that their chemical products directly contribute to the breast cancer epidemic.

Many experts predicted as far back as 30 years ago that cancer rates would increase, citing an explosion of synthetic chemicals. From 1940 through the early 1980's, production of synthetic chemicals increased by a factor of 350.

Billions of tons of toxic substances that never existed are now released into the environment. Yet only 3 percent of the 75,000 chemicals in use have been tested for safety.3 These toxic time bombs are found in our water, air, and soil. Women who live near toxic waste dumps have 6.5 times the incidence of breast cancer.

A survey conducted by Dr. Mary Wolff of Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York found that women with breast cancer had four times the levels of DDE found in non-carcinogenic tumors.4 Also, another study investigated why upper class women in the community of Newton, Massachusetts had higher breast cancer rates than the lower economic women.5 The researchers attributed the increase to greater use of professional lawn care service and more dry cleaning.

Pesticides & Breast Cancer

The pesticide breast cancer link was stunningly highlighted in research from Israel which linked three organochlorine pesticides detected in dairy products to an increase of 12 types of cancer in 10 different strains of mice. After public outcry in 1978, the Israeli government was forced to ban the pesticides Benzene Hexachloride, DDT, and Lindane. Interestingly, breast cancer mortality rates which had increased every year for 25 years, dropped nearly 8 per cent for all age groups and dropped more than a thirty-three percent for women ages 25-34 in 1986.6

The American Cancer Society was founded with the support of the Rockefeller family in 1913. Members of the chemical and pharmaceutical industry have long had a place on its board. Could that have something to do with the fact that the American Cancer Society's latest report on cancer prevention makes no mention of environmental factors?

Tamoxifen: Cure or Cause?

Since Zeneca researched and patented the most popular breast cancer treatment, Tamoxifen, grossing 500 million dollars a year [Tamoxifen is actually the generic name. The brand name is Nolvadex.], perhaps we can forgive their involvement with carcinogenic chemicals... Perhaps not. On May 16th, 2000, the New York Times reported that the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences listed substances that are known to cause cancer. Tamoxifen was included in that list!!7

It is known that Tamoxifen causes uterine cancer, liver cancer, and gastro-intestinal cancer. After just two to three years of use, Tamoxifen will increase the incidence of uterine cancer by two to three times. The treatment for uterine cancer is a hysterectomy. In addition, Tamoxifen increased the risk of strokes, blood clots, eye damage, menopausal symptoms, and depression.

The biggest shock of all is the fact that Tamoxifen will increase the risk of breast cancer! The journal Science published a study from Duke University Medical Center in 1999 showing that after 2 - 5 years, Tamoxifen actually initiated the growth of breast cancer!

Zeneca: Two Sides to the Coin

So, Zeneca, the originator of Breast Cancer Awareness month is the manufacturer of carcinogenic petrochemicals, carcinogenic pollutants, and a breast cancer drug that causes at least four different types of cancer in women, including breast cancer. I ask you to stop and think, "Is something wrong with this picture?"

So, since the Breast Cancer Awareness Month spin doctors claim that breast cancer is "simply not a preventable disease", the focus has shifted to the theme of early detection. Women are now encouraged to get their early mammogram. At one time, only women 50 years or older were told to get this screening. Now the campaign is targeting 40 year olds and even women as young as 25. However, detecting breast cancer with mammography does not protect women from breast cancer.
Mammograms: Adding Injury to Insult!

More questions are being raised about the validity of mammograms. A mammogram is an x-ray. The only acknowledged cause of cancer by the American Cancer Society is from radiation. When it comes to radiation, there is no safe level of exposure.

"There is clear evidence that the breast, particularly in premenopausal women, is highly sensitive to radiation, with estimates of increased risk of up to one percent for every RAD (radiation absorbed dose) unit of x-ray exposure. Even for low dosage exposure of two RADs or less, this exposure can add up quickly for women having an annual mammography," notes Samuel Epstein, M.D., Professor of Occupational and Environmental Medicine at the University of Illinois School of Public Health. "More recent concern comes from evidence that one percent of women, or over one million women in the United States alone, carry a gene that increases their breast cancer risk from radiation fourfold."8

In addition, mammography provides false tumor reports of between 5 and 15 percent of the time. False positive results cause women to be re-exposed to additional X rays and create an environment of further stress, even possibly leading to unneeded surgery.

"Furthermore," says Dr. Epstein, "while there is a general consensus that mammography improves early cancer detection and survival in post-menopausal women, no such benefit is demonstrable for younger women." Still, the American Cancer Society recommends annual or biannual mammography for all women ages forty to fifty-five or earlier.

"Mammograms increase the risk for developing breast cancer and raise the risk of spreading or metastasizing an existing growth," says Dr. Charles B. Simone, a former clinical associate in immunology and pharmacology at the National Cancer Institute. Safer and even more effective diagnostic techniques like infrared thermography has been vigorously attacked by the Breast Cancer Awareness organizations.9

It is also noteworthy to point out that General Electric, a major polluter in PCB's in the Hudson River, N.Y. area, manufactures mammography machines.

So all the hullabaloo that comes each October, enlisting women's support and hard-earned cash does nothing to really eliminate the cause of this devastating disease. Instead, women's heart-felt desires and good intentions to find the cause and cure are usurped by the hidden agendas of major transnational corporations pushing their toxic drug treatments and diagnostic tools that are shown to contribute to even more breast cancer. It makes one wonder if the cancer establishment is really interested in a cure at all.

Can We Do Anything?

Women can make a difference. The causes of cancer are already known. Toxic diets, toxic lifestyles, toxic environments, toxic drug treatments, and toxic diagnostic techniques cause cancer. Corporations are only interested in increasing their profits and ensuring their tentacles of control, not in actual solutions. When it comes to Breast Cancer Awareness Month, women must invest their time and money into projects, initiatives, and treatments that will truly make a difference.

Perhaps it is time to turn in those pink ribbons.


Thank you for taking the time to collect and post all of that information. I was not aware of a lot of it. Yay for boobs and yay for no booby cancer!




kalikshama -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 4:08:47 PM)

quote:

Way to take away from the spirit of this thread kalikshama. My mother is a breast cancer survivor. I celebrate the fact she is a survivor and is alive today, despite this foul disease. Your post detracts from that and I don't appreciate it. Start your own thread instead of taking away from mine.


Let me repeat: And every year I say why the hell don't we focus more on prevention than detection? Which I believe IS the spirit of the thread, but I've stripped out corporate greed and self-interest, and marketing hype.

I want women to know that yearly mammograms are insufficient and in fact can do more harm than good and that they are no longer recommended for most women under 50:


Stop Annual Mammograms, Govt. Panel Tells Women Under 50

By LAUREN COX
ABC News Medical Unit
Nov. 16, 2009

For the first time in 20 years, a government panel is telling women in their 40s to stop getting routine mammograms and recommending that a host of other breast cancer screenings slow down.

The United States Preventive Service Task Force announced Monday that it recommends against annual mammograms for women age 40 to 49 because, they say, the benefits of testing do not outweigh the "harms" and risks.

USPSTF still recommends doctors start screening all women over age 50, but with a mammogram once every two years instead of annually.

The task force also recommends against teaching breast self-exams for all women and said evidence was insufficient to recommend mammograms for women older than 74.

The recommendations were only for women considered to be at normal risk for breast cancer. Women who are at a known high risk -- for instance, women who tested positive for the BRCA-1 and BRCA-2 genes -- would not fall under the guidelines.




DeviantlyD -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 6:58:27 PM)

Nevermind. There's no point in explaining it to you.




Aylee -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 8:32:21 PM)

There has been a new break though in breast imaging. Infrared imaging. Here is the article and second is the direct to you tube.


http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/clickToGive/bcs/article/New-breast-imaging-system-hailed-as-breakthrough219



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXFYL0Vw_eA&feature=player_embedded




DeviantlyD -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 9:39:29 PM)

Very cool. Thanks for the link Aylee, I always like hearing about new procedures and discoveries in the world of medicine.




gman992 -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 10:42:20 PM)

And as such, I am giving free breasts exams!!!! Ladies line up single file, last name starting with the letter A---no uggos...




Termyn8or -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 11:16:45 PM)

Here :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pOV3Kq6hKXI

T^T




DeviantlyD -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 11:39:06 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Termyn8or

Here :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pOV3Kq6hKXI

T^T


Juvenile humour. Why am I not surprised?




Termyn8or -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/4/2011 11:47:51 PM)

Because that is what I intended.

T^T




DeviantlyD -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/5/2011 12:04:12 AM)

I was looking at it from the perspective of that is who you are.




DeviantlyD -> RE: October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month (10/30/2011 1:43:33 AM)

This thread was intended to be positive in the sense of expressing support for those who have breast cancer, gratitude for those who have survived it and hope for the eradication of a cancer that had taken lives and wounded many. It was not intended to take away from any other form of cancer, because they are all horrid diseases.

My thoughts for this thread were inspired by my mother and by a documentary I saw on young breast cancer survivors. While they all have been profoundly affected by this, they all have also exhibited a strength I find so admirable.

Breast cancer awareness month is almost over. It's made me a bit reflective about it. I wish things were better than they are, but I still remain hopeful.

I hope any of you reading this will be proactive in your own health and be supportive, even if only in spirit, of anyone who is dealing with this or who has been through it.



Think Before You Pink

Prevention is Power

National Breast Cancer Foundation

Candid Answers to Some Common Questions

Breast Self Exam - It isn't just about feeling for lumps, but looking for changes in your breasts.

3 Common Mistakes Made During Breast Self-Exams




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