<%@LANGUAGE="JAVASCRIPT" CODEPAGE="1252"%> Sister Study: Jeanie, Peggy and Kathy
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Jeanie, Peggy and Kathy

Photo of Peggy, Jeannie and Kathy

Left to right: Jeanie, peggy and Kathy

 

By Jeanie, a Sister Study participant from Ohio

 

I would like to share my sister's story with you. My name is Jeanie and I am from a family of 11, 3 boys and 8 girls. I am 5th from the bottom and my sister Peggy was 6th. She lived in Indiana with her husband, 2 sons and 2 daughters. I attended a presentation in 1999 by a writer from our local newspaper who spoke about her own battle with breast cancer. I remember her saying that 1 out of 8 women would be diagnosed with breast cancer. Knowing there were 8 of us girls, I recall thinking which one of us that could be. Breast cancer does not run in our family so I dismissed it. I was wrong. It doesn't matter. Peggy always kept up with her annual  checkup, exam and mammogram. She noticed a lump in March 1999. During her routine yearly check up she asked about the lump she felt, but was told not to worry, it was nothing. She also had her yearly mammogram in August which showed nothing. Peggy went to her doctor for a routine cholesterol check in early January of 2000 and asked the doctor about the lump she had felt for the past 9 months. Peggy went for a second mammogram and two weeks later she was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer. I was shocked, but the words of the newspaper writer I heard a year ago rang in my head. It was my sister, Peggy, my best friend who had breast cancer. On February 16, 2000 my sister underwent a partial mastectomy.  She came through the surgery great and everyone was very optimistic. Peggy started chemotherapy and appeared to be in remission. She felt great, had a wonderful summer and came home for our July 4th family picnic. She was also planning our first family reunion  for the summer of 2000. She was active in school projects, committees, sports with the kids and was also volunteering. In late fall she started complaining of back pain that she thought was probably from work. In January of 2001 Peggy went back to the doctor and after more tests learned the cancer was back and had metastasized. Peggy was now diagnosed with bone cancer, only 1 year after her first diagnosis. She underwent treatment again and it was much harder on her this time. We talked almost every day and I went to see her at least once a month. She was always so strong, and worrying about how everyone else was doing.  She hardly ever complained, even though I knew the pain was beneath her smile.  We were able to have our family reunion in July 2001,  just a short distance from her home in Indiana. All along I had tried to get Peggy to go for a second opinion but she was very comfortable with her physician. By the fall of 2001 the cancer had spread to her lungs and she finally agreed to have a second opinion in Ohio.  Once all the questions and x-rays had been looked at, the physician felt that everything was done that could be.  We had forgotten Peggy’s x-rays in the office so I went back to get them.  The physician was standing there and something deep down inside said ask her the question.  Peggy was not present when I asked the question to the physician, what did she feel was Peggy’s prognosis? She said “given her rapid decline, maybe 3 months.”  My heart sank and now I had to go back and face my sister and her family.  I saw it in Peggy’s eyes and in our conversations that she was declining, but with the final news, I was devastated. Some of the family went to Indiana for one of our old fashioned Thanksgiving's that Peggy wanted to have. She felt good for most of the day, but again the pain was hidden by her smiles. The next few months were the hardest, especially with the holidays. In January she asked the sisters to come to Indiana to spend the weekend. We had a beautiful time with Peggy, knowing that we were spending our last weekend together with her. Peggy went into the hospital on February 12th. I told her I wanted to come down and spend some time with her, and she kept telling me the following week was better, “no need while I'm in the hospital” she felt. We spoke everyday and on Thursday I noticed a change in her. I called her and talked with her for a few minutes and then she asked if she could call me back after visiting hours. She asked me about coming to Indiana and I told her I would be there. We talked about her girls and how much she wanted me to be there for them.  We talked about our childhood and what we meant to each other. I could tell the time was drawing near but she was so much at peace. Peggy came home from the hospital on Friday.  I did not speak with her on Saturday, and the following afternoon she was taken back to the hospital.  The girls had called and said they would let me know when to come once they got her settled there.  Of course we got the call, but Peggy died on that Sunday, February 17, 2002 at the age of 49 while my son was driving me to Indiana. Thursday was the last time I heard my sister's voice and I arrived at her home on Monday February 18th as she had planned.
When I heard about the Sister Study from a friend who helped me through the loss of my sister, there was never a question in my mind that it would be an honor to participate and to represent my sister, Peggy, and all women who battle breast cancer. I passed the study along to my sister Kathy, who is now participating as well. Peggy taught me how to always look for the wonderful and blessed things in our life even as we walk through, indeed the valley of death.

 

 

 

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