Essayer OR - Gratuit
For my SISTERS
Woman One Shot UK
|Issue 289
After battling breast cancer twice and losing two sisters to the disease, Caroline Kennedy Alexander, 54, is determined to make survivors feel beautiful

Breast cancer is something I’m unfortunately very familiar with. I know all too well how heartbreaking it is to lose a loved one to the terrible disease and also how devastating it is to be diagnosed with it, too.
In 2004, breast cancer sent a wrecking ball through my family’s life, with both my sisters, Rose and Mary, being diagnosed. Tragically, Rose died that same year.
Then, in March 2012, after a routine mammogram, I was called back to the hospital for a biopsy. My husband even dropped me off outside without coming in, because we never thought in a million years I had breast cancer. But during the checks for the biopsy the surgeon asked if I’d consider a mastectomy. Breast cancer hadn’t even been confirmed but I knew my mammogram must have looked serious.
My mind raced. I had two children at home – a daughter, then 14, and an 11-year-old son –and the thought of leaving them broke my heart.
As soon as I got back from the hospital, I loaded the kids into my car and made the drive from my home in Edinburgh to where I grew up in Ireland so I could be with my family, while I waited for the results.
Just three days later, the hospital called. I had breast cancer. It seemed catastrophically unfair, a statistical impossibility. Neither me nor my sisters carried the BRCA1 gene, linked to breast cancer, yet all three of us had somehow been afflicted.
I was given the option for a complete mastectomy but I couldn’t fathom the idea of losing my breasts – I was only 43. To me, they symbolised my femininity, my sexuality – I wasn’t ready to give up those things.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition Issue 289 de Woman One Shot UK.
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