A cancer survivor speaks:
I consider myself to be an open-minded person. I do my best not to
judge others or their beliefs and ideals. I have a pretty good sense of
humor and am usually the first to poke fun at myself. And I make light
of breast cancer and my struggles, treatments and their side effects,
lack of breasts, fear of death, etc. fairly frequently. It is how I
cope. But, given what I have been through, I think I have earned the
right to joke and make light of how this terrible disease has affected
me. But if you haven’t been there or taken care of someone who has been
there, then you should think twice before you publicize a day that
jokes about putting the first body parts we usually lose to this disease
“out there” on display even more conspicuously and then labeling it as
an activity that helps our ’cause’.
We live in a society that makes a huge hoopla about breast cancer
while at the very same time trivializing the seriousness of the disease.
How can we be so contradictory?
While I am beyond thrilled that breast cancer is no longer a taboo
issue and that people are talking about it, the commercialism has gotten
out of hand. There is nothing pink and rosy about breast cancer, yet
it has been pink-washed to death. It is a serious disease that kills. (Read more.)
More commentary from Theresa Thomas,
HERE.
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