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www.HereditaryColonCancerFoundation.org and www.HCCTakesGuts.org are informational and support websites for those affected by hereditary colon cancer syndromes. The website does not provide medical advice, recommend or endorse health care products or services, or control the information found on external websites.

 

Hereditary Colon Cancer Foundation and the Familial Adenomatous Polyposis Foundation are registered charitable organizations in Illinois and Utah, and tax-exempt under Internal Revenue Code Section 501(c)(3). Mailing address: 3519 NE 15th Avenue, Unit 518, Portland, OR 97212  |  info@HCCTakesGuts.org

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Hereditary Colon Cancer Takes Guts

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Attenuated FAP, Cowden Syndrome, Familial Adenomatous Polyposis, Gardner Syndrome, 

Hereditary Mixed Polyposis, Juvenile Polyposis Syndrome, Lynch Syndrome, Muir-Torre Syndrome, MYH-Associated Polyposis, Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome, Turcot Syndrome

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    Is it THAT Time of Year, Again?!?

    July 18, 2016

    Pity is usually available only in short supply in my family. We’re very much a “Life’s hard…Wear a helmet” group of people. That’s not to say that we don’t care for each other, because we definitely do…we just don’t see any point in sitting on the ground, looking at a skinned elbow, and lamenting the fact that we fell. My mom used to tell me that the only thing crying does is ‘make your eyes red and nose snotty.’ Some call it ‘tough love.’ Some call it ‘the school of hard knocks.” 

     

    I think a lot of people see their yearly screening, regard-

    less of the organ in question, as a grim reminder of a

    disease lurking in the shadows, waiting to pounce at any time. They worry that this

    will be the time when the findings warrant surgical intervention, or worse, that cancer is detected. This really resonates with me. For a long time after my colectomy, I thought I would die at an early age and lived life accordingly. I went in for endoscopies expecting for the doctor to find polyps. I didn’t really fear what the doctor would find, so much as I smugly accepted my fate. 

     

                                                             

                                                             

    As a kid, Mom prepared me in much the same way she did for anything she knew that I wasn’t going to enjoy - “I’m sorry, sweetie, but you don’t really have a choice in the matter. Either you get the colonoscopy or you get cancer like your grandfather did, and I don’t think you want that.” It was always a choice between something bad and something much worse. I know now, of course, that it upset her to see me go through these tests, but she held back from showing it. She knew that if she got upset, I’d get upset, and then what? We’d both be upset and I still have to get the colonoscopy. That’s not good for anybody.

     

    When I was experiencing phases of chronic illness between 2011 and 2013, an encroaching endoscopy would stress me out. I was already sick; having that confirmed by an endoscopy never felt good. On the bright side, I used to treat myself to the dirtiest, nastiest burger and fries I could find just before I did my prep. It was kind of awesome…all the taste, none of the calories!

    My lifestyle has evolved tremendously over the past few years. My approach to healthy living includes exercise, meditation, acupuncture, reducing toxins in my food,

    water, and living space, eating healthy, and taking polyp-reducing supplements. I’m currently looking more deeply into what eastern traditional medicine can do to promote a healthy homeostasis. The transition, especially on the heals of a long drawn out illness, has helped me become very in tune with what is going on in my body. I have this sense like I would know if there is something wrong with me. The result is that, instead of dreading my yearly screening, I look forward to it as a way to measure my success. 

     

    This blog as was first featured as an Ambry Genetics Cancer Blog.

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