Sunday, December 30, 2018

Holiday and New Year Wishes


As we quickly near the end of another year and we enjoy the festivities of the season, I wish you joy and laughter as you gather with family and friends and hope 2019 brings you continued happiness, health, and blessings!

Speaking of blessings, you have likely noticed me being a bit quieter on here than usual. In late September (precisely one day after I called to confirm my spot on the 2019 Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge team roster), someone very near/dear to me was rushed to the hospital for an unrelated condition during which it was discovered that they had suspicious masses on their lung. From that day onward, my training for and support of Dana-Faber was literally what helped me to navigate weeks of uncertainty, appointment logistics, and the emotional roller coaster of learning that someone you love has cancer.

On the Tuesday after Thanksgiving, that person had surgery at Brigham and Women's hospital in Boston to remove the middle lobe of their lung - the site of the primary and largest tumor. While I anxiously awaited news of their prognosis, I sat in a waiting room and drafted my November DFMC newsletter (if you aren't on the list and wish to be, please drop me a note to be added). I was anxious. And scared. There are so many unknowns with cancer, not the least of which is that you cannot stage it without tissue samples and in the case of this patient, the only way to retrieve that tissue was during the surgery. Meaning we had no idea if this was truly being caught early (as we prayed and hoped) or if they would discover it had progressed farther into other parts of the lungs (where pre-cancerous or even early stage cancer cells can spread but are not always be detected by a PET scan, used to illuminate areas of high metabolic activity often indicative of cancer and which had been done prior to the surgery). 

Thanks to the tremendous talent, dedication, and precision of thoracic surgeon Dr. Yolonda Colson and her team at BWH - to whom we were referred by the Dana-Farber Diagnostic Clinic - the patient came through surgery beautifully. Even better was the initial thought that the lobectomy had removed what indeed turned out to be a 2.5 cm adenocarcinoma in the patient's middle lobe and there were no initial signs of cancer in the surrounding lobe tissue and lymph nodes, meaning it was unlikely to have spread. That being said, the only way to confirm this would be to wait for the full pathology results of all the tissues samples retrieved during the surgery. So while the patient grew stronger every day and was discharged after only four days in the hospital, we anxiously awaited the pathology results. 

On Friday, December 14th I heard the most beautiful words. "We got it all." That's what Dr. Colson said as we sat in her office and reviewed the full pathology report. The cancer was classified as Stage 1 and the pathology was clear, meaning there are no signs of further cancerous activity at this time – which also means no chemo or radiation will be necessary. This person will have to undergo scans every three months for the next three years to monitor for reoccurrence (for which they are now at a higher risk for) and then if they continue to have clean scans (showing no cancer), they will have scans every six months thereafter until reaching the five year mark at which they can officially say they are cancer free. And while we can never know what the future might hold, this is the most promising news we could have hoped to hear following a cancer diagnosis. 

A blessing in every sense of the word given it is estimated that only 1 in 6 lung cancers are caught as Stage 1 when surgery alone can be considered potentially “curative” (noting again that doctors will not consider someone cured of cancer until they reach the five-year mark of clean scans). 

Thus, my third DFMC season has become deeply personal. As we enter the fourth week of official training, I have certainly felt the magnitude of what DFMC funds more keenly than ever before, and your gifts and support are more meaningful than you could know. In fact, you have helped me to reach the $5k milestone before the New Year, a milestone which it took me until February to reach in each of my two previous DFMC seasons. WOW and THANK YOU!!! 

And because you know I like keeping the FUN in fundraising - as well as find ways to give back to YOU while you support vital cancer research - be sure to check out the EVENTS tab above where you can learn about 2019 Super Bowl Squares (now on sale!), Paint for A Cause, Dine for a Cause dates, and more!

Wishing you all the joys and blessings that 2019 can possibly bring you, and thank you again for your love and support!

xoxo

Erin


                                                     





Monday, December 10, 2018

T-Minus 18 Weeks: Let the Training Begin!

So I have been a little quiet on here lately - rare for me, I know. In late September someone very near/dear to me learned they had a potentially cancerous tumor - a few weeks later with a referral to the very best at Dana-Farber's diagnostic clinic and Brigham and Women's surgical team, we learned this would require major surgery which took place just after Thanksgiving. While I'm not able to share much more than that at this point in time, I can say that the honor and privilege to run Boston for Dana-Farber, and the critical research this team funds, has never been made more real to me than in these past two months.

Intermingled with this news was our first team meeting on November 7th and our first group run this past Saturday, December 8th. Both allowed the chance to reconnect with so many from our DFMC family as well as to welcome our "newbies" to the team. Our "official" training plan started today and over the next 18 weeks we will run upwards of 250 miles - or 840,000 steps and 85+ hours on our feet - with one hell of a 26.2 mile victory lap on April 15, 2019. I hope to be celebrating having raised at least $13,100 to fund vital cancer research - though if I am being honest, after raising $18,668 in 2016 and being just shy of the 20k Pacesetter mark (Pacesetters are top fundraisers on our team who meet various milestones such as 13.1k, 20k, and 26.2k), the competitor in me is not so secretly aiming to raise 20k to kick cancer's butt!

Quick shout outs to my #BirthdayChallenge and #GivingTuesday bonus winners - Peter Naughton and Ellen Hourihan! Each received a Starbucks gift card for donating during those challenges, and I appreciate your support!

Running wise, I had my first 6 mile run on Saturday since before I got pregnant in 2016, and I felt great! No surprise that getting to be back out on the course with my favorite teammates and volunteers was a game changer. Day 1 of my plan called for 3-4 miles and I stuck to the lower end with a solid 3 and plan to do 4 tomorrow (when Day 2 again calls for 3-4). Stretching, core work, and even greater focus on diet will all come into play now as well.

Thanks as always for your love and support...here we go!




Getting in today's miles while wearing my new Tracer 360 LED safety vest
on Day 1 of training for the 2019 Boston Marathon.