The star of stage and screen Vanessa Bell Calloway had
always been diligent about her health. But when breast cancer struck, she had
to make hard choices about what the healthiest choices would mean.
Actress
Vanessa Bell Calloway couldn’t help but be moved by the recent editorial by
fellow actress Angelina Jolie discussing her decision to have a preventative
double mastectomy. In 2009, the veteran of stage, television, and film went in
for a mammogram and was told the results looked “suspicious.”
Here’s her testimony…
The star of stage and screen Vanessa Bell Calloway had
always been diligent about her health. But when breast cancer struck, she had
to make hard choices about what the healthiest choices would mean.
Actress
Vanessa Bell Calloway couldn’t help but be moved by the recent editorial by
fellow actress Angelina Jolie discussing her decision to have a preventative
double mastectomy. In 2009, the veteran of stage, television, and film went in
for a mammogram and was told the results looked “suspicious.”
Here’s her testimony…
I can still remember sitting straight up in my bed one
morning thinking something’s wrong. I didn’t know what it was and I didn’t know
where it was, I just knew something wasn’t right and I couldn’t explain it. I
told my husband, an anesthesiologist, about the feeling I had. First he asked
if I was in pain and I said no and then he said not to worry, but of course I
did anyway. I had that nagging feeling that all women get at one time or
another when that little voice in our heads just won’t be silent.
I’d always been very diligent about getting my yearly
mammograms, pap smears, and anything else related to my health since I’d become
an adult woman. Sometimes I’d even get them twice a year if the spirit hit me.
I took care of myself in other ways as well. I’d been a dancer since childhood
so exercise was a part of my daily regiment, and because I’m an actress, being
fit goes along with the job description. A healthy lifestyle was an attitude I
wanted to pass down to my two daughters, Ashley 22, and Alexandra, 18.
It was cancer in its early stages in my left breast. Yes,
at 51 years old I was stunned, but I had a plan that I put into action quickly.
To know me is to know that I’m a “planner.” This would be no different. I would
simply have a lumpectomy. Then I’d have radiation to complete treatment. There
would still be no need to tell my parents, my husband’s parents, or my two
daughters as my youngest was a sophomore in high school and my oldest was a
sophomore in college. My girl’s lives wouldn't have to be turned upside down
and I could continue to go on auditions for television roles in-between
treatments.
Well, breast cancer taught me a thing or two about
control. I don’t have it—God does. After my first lumpectomy, x-rays showed
more cancer in the margins around my breast. At that point I really should have
started to consider having a mastectomy, but I didn’t. As Angelina Jolie
implies in her editorial, we as women oftentimes connect our breasts to our
womanhood and to our beauty, so we don’t want to lose them. So I had a second
lumpectomy to remove what I thought would be the remaining cancerous tissue.
After that procedure I moved on immediately as if the
next step would be the radiation treatments. In fact I was so confident that
radiation was where I was headed that I’d made a hairdresser appointment so I
could look good while getting my treatments. Now that’s another day I’ll never
forget. Me alone at my hairdresser’s getting a blow-dry and receiving a phone
call on my cell from the doctor’s office telling me that they’d found more
cancer and that a mastectomy would have to be done. God knows I tried so hard
to hold it together sitting in that chair, but before I knew it I was balled up
in the middle of the hairdresser’s floor crying like a baby.
My husband and best friend drove to pick me up after I
received the news since I was in no condition to get myself home. Both of them
took turns trying to calm me down and I can still hear my husband saying to me,
“We have graduations and weddings to attend and you have to be there.” I knew
he was right. I knew I had to do what I needed to do to be there for my girls.
Because my husband is in the medical field I was
fortunate to have a great team of specialists I trusted and who took excellent
care of me all the way. And because I chose to have reconstructive surgery
using my own body fat at the same time as my mastectomy, my surgeon did a
little liposuction on my middle area as well. Hey, you have to make lemonade
out lemons. The beauty of having the surgeries done all in the same day was
that I never saw my body without my breasts. I did see it bruised, swollen, and
cut but I got through it day by day with the love and support of my husband and
family.
Over the last four years and since my surgery, I’ve been
present to see my youngest daughter graduate from high school and my oldest
daughter graduate from college. I plan on being present to witness much more in
the years to come. Still, it’s never far away from me that I am a breast cancer
survivor and I’m the mother of two daughters even if we have to pay for them
out of pocket. And while my family had no history of breast cancer, my
husband’s mother did battle with the disease, so we live knowing our daughter’s
may have a higher chance of developing it. And sadly for African-American
women, when breast cancer hits, it is often more aggressive and more deadly.
Just this past Christmas my youngest daughter found a lump in one of her
breasts. We were on pins and needles during the holidays until we found out it
was benign.
That’s our reality and there is no running away from it. So I’m taking
control again in the only way that I can. By talking to my girls about getting
mammograms earlier than suggested because of their history. That goes for
genetic testing as well. I know far too many women lack the insurance to get
much of the health care they need, but I encourage them to research the various
programs that fund free mammograms and other free cancer screenings and tests.
Finally, as a breast cancer survivor I applaud Angelina
Jolie for her honesty and for her bravery in sharing her bold decision. I can
only hope it encourages all women of all colors to summon that same strength in
making bold decisions and in taking better care of themselves.
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