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Survivor Story: A village of Support

7/1/2022

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by: BARB MCMAHON

I went for my usual Mammogram (delayed 6 months because of Covid). The tech was taking more pictures than usual. I said something to my husband that evening, and he said I should wait until the radiologist read my results. Two days later I got a call from the doctor in the breast clinic. She wanted me to come in to talk. I then found out I had suspicious changes in both of my breasts. She then asked if we could do some biopsies. We did it right away that afternoon.

The clinic said they would let me know when they received the results. We decided to go to our cabin for a long weekend. On Tuesday we got THE phone call, and the biopsies came back as cancer. My husband took the phone call, and I could tell by his facial expression that the news was not good. I cried most of the day. I asked God, why me? I have no family history of breast cancer. Since I made the decision to have both breasts removed and reconstruction done at the same time, the surgery date was delayed. So, after I shared this with my family of five girls, they came over and said they would be on my team to pray for me. So, this was the last part of April.

Previously we had made the decision to move out of our home we had lived in for 30 years. We started packing up our house on May 12, 2022. We had so much stuff! I started to get things ready for a big garage sale. I asked people to help because we had to keep somethings for the next house. The garage sale was a success. This took my mind off the cancer.

We still had a lot to pack up, but we were going to downsize. We waited until after my surgery for the final packing. I chose to remove both breasts and have reconstruction done at the same time. It was a long surgery. I don’t remember much after the surgery. The next day both doctors came in to see me. They asked if I wanted to stay another day and I said no. I like being at home, Hospitals tend to be loud. Mary brought in some heart pillows from the Beyond Pink TEAM support group to put under my arms. They were such a relief. I had a village that surrounded me with a lot of love and encouragement. The pink team answered all my questions, and gave me a bag to carry everything home in.

When I got home my daughters had made a sign to welcome me home. They had a dinner for us, and then my youngest daughter gave me a boob puzzle. I loved their sense of humor! They were keeping my spirits up. I had sent a prayer request to our church and that goes online. The cards and casseroles started coming in. I felt God was taking CARE OF ME. My husband made an encouragement board for me. All cards and Smacks went up on this board.

​I believe that God brought me through this. I was very close to Him and listened to Him. It ‘s been a year since the diagnosis, and I am doing well. My endurance is almost back to baseline. Both cancers turned out to be early and no lymph nodes were involved. I did not need radiation or chemo. I am on an anti estrogen pill that I tolerate well. - I am grateful.

​
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​FOOD AND NUTRITION: IT DOESN’T HAVE TO BE COMPLICATED

7/1/2022

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by Dr. Andrew Nish, Medical Director, John Stoddard Cancer Center, Des Moines, Iowa

There is a plethora of advertisements trying to sell the latest in nutrition; low fat, high fat, no lectins, this powder, and that shake. No wonder we are all confused but it does not have to be complicated. Let’s keep it simple - eat real food, mostly plants, as close to its original form as possible. Real food, that which mother nature has provided for us, is high in fiber (feeding the 40 trillion microbes in your gut) and low in sugar. Processed food is just the opposite, low in fiber (therefore no food for the microbes in your gut) and high in sugar.

Food: A substance that is used in the body of an organism to sustain growth, repair, and vital processes and to furnish energy.
Poison: A substance that is capable of causing illness or death of a living organism.

Real food supports growth and repair and supplies energy while processed food is a slow acting poison.

For decades we have been brainwashed (mainly by the food industry and government) that a calorie is a calorie. All calories are interchangeable. The implication is that a calorie from any food source is just a calorie, eat too many, expend too few and you become obese. The problem with this model is that it doesn’t take into account that we are complex biologic beings and that what we put into our mouths directly effects hormonal and metabolic responses telling us to either burn or store energy. Thus, the calorie in, calorie out model is an inherently flawed model. We have been told eat less and exercise more and all will be well but as we have witnessed over the past 50 years nothing can be further from the truth. All food is inherently good in its natural state, what has been done to the food is the problem (processing). It is not what you eat that is important but specifically what your body does with what you eat.

This is where insulin comes in. Insulin is a hormone that is produced by your pancreas and has 3 main functions: it lowers your blood sugar; it signals your body to store energy in the form of fat and it stimulates cell growth. Insulin is vital to life but too much promotes energy storage (fat) and cell growth (cancer). In western society it has been estimated that up to 88% of people have too much insulin and a main driver is the food we eat.

As Dr. Robert Lustig says: “the key to reducing your insulin levels is to protect the liver and feed the gut.” This means eating real food, high fiber, low sugar and eliminating processed food, low fiber, and high sugar. At this point sugar deserves a special mention. The consumption of sugar, specifically the fructose molecule in sugar drives insulin resistance (reduced response of cells to insulin) and therefore elevated levels of insulin. We are swimming in sugar. Up to 80% of all processed foods in the grocery store have added sugar. That means that most foods that are purchased have added sugar, the driver of insulin resistance.

The World Health Organization recommends that we consume not more than 6 teaspoons of added sugar per day (that is 24 grams). Unfortunately, most Americans consume 20-25 teaspoons per day. Natural sugar in fruits and vegetables do not count toward that total as long as they are eaten as their whole and not consumed as juice.

​Nutrition does not need to be complicated. Eliminate processed foods and sugary beverages and make a wide variety of plants the center piece of your meals including a rainbow of vegetables and fruits, nuts, seeds, spices, herbs, whole grains (minimize any processing) and legumes as well as healthy oils (olive) and small amounts of animal protein. Next time you make a food choice think about whether that choice is feeding your gut microbiome (those 40 trillion organisms that support your health) and protecting your liver from the ravages of sugar and processed food– high fiber and low sugar. 
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CONTACT US

Beyond Pink TEAM
c/o Jeanne Olson, Treasurer
1407 Asbury Lane
Waterloo, IA 50701
​beyondpinkteam@gmail.com
(319) 239-3706
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  • Home
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    • Our Board
    • Annual Report
    • Contact Us
  • Support
    • Physical
    • Emotional
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  • Education
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    • Ignite the Cancer Conversation
    • Quality Care
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    • Request Speaker
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    • What is Advocacy
    • National Breast Cancer Coalition
    • Iowa Stop Breast Cancer
    • Research
    • Influencing Policy
    • Access to Care
  • Join Us
    • Be an Advocate
    • Volunteer
    • Events >
      • 16th Annual Pink Ribbon Run
    • Membership
    • Donate to BPT
    • Follow Us