ORA Orthopedics Komen Breast Cancer Walk Team Back row left to right: Jackie Kaas, Sandy Claus (survivor) Michele Moore (survivor) Breanne Young, Joanie Curless; and in front Mary Miller (survivor).
Breast cancer survivors and other colleagues from ORA have formed a team that will take to the streets during the Komen Foundation’s Race for the Cure event on June 13, 2015. One of those team members, Mary Miller, agreed to share her story with Let’s Move Quad Cities as we continue to learn what moves our friends and neighbors in the community.
Conquering Breast Cancer with Strength, Hope and Joy
by Breast Cancer Survivor Mary Miller, ORA Orthopedics
When I started walking the Race for the Cure, I never imagined I’d end up being “one of those women.” My mom had breast cancer, so that gave me added incentive to participate and then circumstances got even more relevant. I had a mammogram in March, 2009, and it showed some calcific densities, so the radiologists did several different biopsies to test tissue.
Unexpected news brings hope in the form of community

Breast cancer survivors Michele Moore, Sandy Claus, and Mary Miller – showing that breast cancer can be conquered and shouldn’t stop people from living normal, happy lives.
Walking in the Komen Race for the Cure, I feel like part of a community of survivors, fighters, and supporters with me. All the women wearing pink shirts, some with scarves on their heads to cover their baldness, some in wheelchairs – in different stages of treatment and all smiling.
It’s such a great feeling.
While I was going through the testing, mastectomies, axial node dissection, chemo, then reconstruction, I thought it would never end. But it did, and now I feel like myself again.
My cancer was caught early, and I had several choices to pick from, but I chose to have a bilateral mastectomy so I wouldn’t have to worry as much that it would come back. My oncologist had a proven treatment regimen ready for me, and I have less than 2 years to go. The time has gone by so fast, I can’t believe that next month it will be the 5-year mark.
Doing the most with a second chance
After my treatment was over, I felt like I had a second chance.
My mom, dad, and brother each had different forms of cancer and passed away within 3 months of diagnosis, so I believe I’ve beat it, thanks to an early diagnosis and great treatment from great doctors. Cancer doesn’t mean a death sentence for most people.
My advice for women – get a yearly mammogram!
I had no lumps or signs of cancer. It was the digital mammogram that alerted the doctors to a possible problem. It could have grown, undiagnosed for years until I would have felt a lump, and then it would probably have spread and been very hard, if not impossible, to cure.
For women (and men) who receive the news that they have breast cancer – it’s scary, but there have been so many advances in treatment in the last decade or so.
Conquering Breast Cancer with Strength, Hope and Joy
by Breast Cancer Survivor Mary Miller, ORA Orthopedics
When I started walking the Race for the Cure, I never imagined I’d end up being “one of those women.” My mom had breast cancer, so that gave me added incentive to participate and then circumstances got even more relevant. I had a mammogram in March, 2009, and it showed some calcific densities, so the radiologists did several different biopsies to test tissue.
Unexpected news brings hope in the form of community

Breast cancer survivors Michele Moore, Sandy Claus, and Mary Miller – showing that breast cancer can be conquered and shouldn’t stop people from living normal, happy lives.
During the week after the Race for the Cure that year, I got a call at work from my surgeon giving me the scary news that I had breast cancer. All my life I was terrified of the word “cancer,” thinking it meant certain death.
Walking in the Komen Race for the Cure, I feel like part of a community of survivors, fighters, and supporters with me. All the women wearing pink shirts, some with scarves on their heads to cover their baldness, some in wheelchairs – in different stages of treatment and all smiling.
It’s such a great feeling.
While I was going through the testing, mastectomies, axial node dissection, chemo, then reconstruction, I thought it would never end. But it did, and now I feel like myself again.
My cancer was caught early, and I had several choices to pick from, but I chose to have a bilateral mastectomy so I wouldn’t have to worry as much that it would come back. My oncologist had a proven treatment regimen ready for me, and I have less than 2 years to go. The time has gone by so fast, I can’t believe that next month it will be the 5-year mark.
Doing the most with a second chance
After my treatment was over, I felt like I had a second chance.
My mom, dad, and brother each had different forms of cancer and passed away within 3 months of diagnosis, so I believe I’ve beat it, thanks to an early diagnosis and great treatment from great doctors. Cancer doesn’t mean a death sentence for most people.
My advice for women – get a yearly mammogram!
I had no lumps or signs of cancer. It was the digital mammogram that alerted the doctors to a possible problem. It could have grown, undiagnosed for years until I would have felt a lump, and then it would probably have spread and been very hard, if not impossible, to cure.
For women (and men) who receive the news that they have breast cancer – it’s scary, but there have been so many advances in treatment in the last decade or so.
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