What it means to be a cancer survivor













































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Bob Husz


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Jason Schoo


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Jacqueline Hill


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Bernie Duhaime


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Cheryle Rambo


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Lola Martin


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Ardith Hopp

Several cancer survivors who were treated by UNMC physicians attended a news conference on Friday with legendary newsman and Ambassador of Hope award recipient, Tom Brokaw.

Each survivor was asked what it meant to live through the disease. Here are their answers.

Lymphoma survivor Bob Husz: “I used to think you had to go 90 miles an hour all the time. I don’t think that anymore. But I’ll tell you, the care I got here was tops.”

Head and neck cancer survivor Jason Schoo: “It’s an accomplishment I hope I can share with others. I want to let them know that I’ve been there and there is light at the end of the tunnel.”

Breast cancer survivor Jacqueline Hill: “It means that I overcame my illness, even if it’s only for the time being. Now I can reach out and share my experience with others.”

Breast cancer survivor Jo Meier: “It means I’m alive. It means I did something right, although I don’t know what I did.”

Prostate cancer survivor Bernie Duhaime: “I’m proud of it now. When I found out I was more shocked. Now I want to do all I can to help the next generation get through it as well.”

Colon cancer survivor Cheryle Rambo: “My daughter had been after me to get a colonoscopy because I was having some intestinal issues that I didn’t think were serious. When she was pregnant in 2004, she refused to tell me the sex of the baby until I got a colonoscopy. I got the procedure and it caught the cancer. Colon cancer is so silent; it won’t always give you the kind of symptoms that make you want to run to the doctor. Mine was painless and quite a surprise to me. I was very lucky that it was caught when it was. Now I tell everybody to get one. It’s the only way you can really know you’re cancer free.”

Breast cancer survivor Lola Martin: “It means life. It means I have more time to do the things I’d hoped for. It makes me realize how blessed I am. It’s life itself.”

Lymphoma survivor Bill Penry: “It means that I get to enjoy a life that I was intended to live. In 1993 and 1994, I was told I wasn’t going to survive. I’m a very lucky person. Of course I know it wasn’t luck, it’s the work that they do here.”

Pancreatic cancer survivor Ardith Hopp: “Surviving cancer means that I was able to become a grandma. I have two grandchildren, Kirsten, 3, and Barrett, 1. I now live with insulin injections, bouts of severe jaundice and a bad itching all over my body at times. But, I also have my grandchildren and the ability to be an inspiration to other people unlucky enough to get pancreatic cancer. I’m still here.”

Breast cancer survivor Michelle Sanzovrin: “It just means that I’m cancer free and able to enjoy my children growing up. Now I recognize what’s most important in life.”