“When I grow up, I want to have cancer,” said no one ever.
“When I grow up, I want to have cancer,” said no one ever.
I walked into Starbucks this morning and was greeted with a hug by an old friend, Dave Martinez. He sat with me for a short while to chit chat about cancer, what I do and what he does and how to reach those who need help.
No one ever thinks this will happen to them. We don’t prepare properly and maybe we do this as part of wishful thinking. Truth is that every person that I’ve ever talked to who is currently battling cancer or has successfully fought cancer has told me the same horror stories as they dealt with medical costs. In fact, I can honestly say that I have never met a single person touched by cancer who has told me that medical bills have never posed a problem and they are doing just fine and dandy.
No one has ever told me that they felt they were prepared enough to handle the financial burden of cancer treatment.
No one has ever told me that their employer or their business was completely ok with taking a few years off to heal.
Do YOU know of anyone who has it all together and ready to beat cancer if and when it comes knocking at their door?
I don’t. Even with as much as I have witnessed, I still don’t feel secure enough to know I have a fighting chance.
So what stops us? Do we feel invincible to cancer? Do we feel like cancer is something that hurts other people and not us? Do we just want to avoid the whole idea of it all? Is ignorance really bliss?
By the time I get the inbox full of questions that looks something like…
Every cancer patient’s situation is different. How I chose to help as many as I could is by speaking openly and candidly about cancer to as many as will listen, participate in fundraising activities that help in identifying both the CAUSE and the CURE of cancer world wide and for the treatments, co-pays, colonoscopies for early detection, transportation and housing of current cancer patients. How YOU choose to help may be something completely different but if we all do one thing, something, a little bit… together we can do so much!
I still have a few hundred dollars to raise and ask for your help. This half Ironman that I have scheduled in less than three months is the last big event I’m doing with Team in Training. Please find it in your heart to give just a bit if you haven’t ever before. $10, $20 any amount helps. My mother counted on this very same organization to help our family and I am very very grateful to have had the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society help our family. I was gifted six years after Momma’s diagnosis and almost three years after Sissy’s to live precious, sacred memories with them. A $20 donation can help another family with the opportunity to make one more special memory. Please grant that to them.
Donate online here on this link: http://pages.teamintraining.org/sctx/yourway16/mcardenasb
or here: DONATION LINK
Invest in Finding Cures
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) is the largest voluntary cancer research agency specifically focused on finding cures and better treatments for blood cancer patients. With the scope and scale to fund many projects at the same time, LLS supports hundreds of cancer scientists around the world.
Research Depends on You
Unlike commercial enterprises that consider blood cancers as “orphan diseases” with small markets and limited profit potential, LLS funds research based on medical need without regard to commercial return or market size. Every dollar invested comes from charitable support from concerned donors.
Extend Your Reach
LLS funds hundreds of promising researchers at leading cancer centers and universities worldwide. And since LLS has no campus or laboratories to maintain, your investment funds more research and less overhead than a donation made elsewhere.
Why Invest Now?
Many scientists, clinicians and clinical trial participants have developed and improved current standards of care over time. It takes about eight years to develop a successful new drug. The time to invest in new therapies is now.
What Will My Donation Do?
- Encourage scientists to pursue blood cancer research. Grants to young scientists help grow research talent even as federal research funding becomes increasingly limited.
- Develop “targeted therapies” that kill cancer cells selectively. By hitting specific molecular targets, these treatments don’t harm patients’ healthy cells, resulting in fewer dangerous side effects.
- Test immunotherapies. Immunotherapies strengthen a patient’s own immune system so it can better fight infections and attack cancer cells, reducing the need for damaging chemotherapy.
- Improve the safety of today’s cures. LLS funds research to predict, manage and prevent complications in patients most at risk for long-term and late effects of treatment.
- Help patients and their families make informed decisions. LLS supplies information and counseling to help guide patients through their cancer journey and access current treatment and clinical trial options.
- Provide financial aid and co-pay assistance. A cancer diagnosis is hard enough without having to deal with its financial burden. We provide programs to help relieve the economic strain of a blood cancer diagnosis.
- Offer community services. Among the wide array of programs LLS provides are those that link newly diagnosed patients with trained volunteers and that help young cancer patients return to school after an absence resulting from treatment.
- Encourage our state and federal legislators to support blood cancer issues. With your help, LLS brings to the attention of lawmakers the urgent need for increased government funding and support of research and patient access to affordable treatment and quality care.
Make a Difference!
Donate online here on this link: http://pages.teamintraining.org/sctx/yourway16/mcardenasb
or here: DONATION LINK
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This entry was posted on August 28, 2015 at 10:16 am and is filed under cancer with tags american cancer society, austin texas 70.3, blood cancer, cancer, Cancer Cure, cancer donation help, cancer patient, cancer sucks, cancer survivor half ironman, cancer survivor ironman, cigna cancer insurance, colon cancer, colonoscopy, cure, dave martinez, how can i help someone with cancer, how do i donate to cancer, insurance, ironman austin 70.3, ironman training cancer, leukemia and lymphoma society, myssie cardenas barajas, Team in Training, training for first 70.3. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
August 28, 2015 at 10:04 pm
In the UK we get our healthcare paid for by the state. This is funded through everyone having a small percentage of their earnings taken off them in a similar way to tax. When my dad’s cancer could not be cured, he spent his final days in a hospice. This local hospice does an amazing job for both patients and family and relies on volunteers and donations. Because of my experience, this is one of the main charities I support. My sister also spent her final days in a hospice following her battle with cancer. I think my point is that we’ve been well looked after, and there are a lot of charities that help, but there are still disadvantaged people who need more help. No cancer suffer should face the worries of funding their treatment. Thank goodness there are dedicated people like you to help those that need it.
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August 28, 2015 at 11:01 pm
I hope that one day soon, for the sake of our nation, that this country gets our health care industry in check like some of the rest of the world. Not knocking our scientists and medical professionals at all, it’s just that we tend to complicate health matters here with politics and profits and forget about the lives behind the reason for medicine in the first place.
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January 9, 2017 at 2:13 pm
My wife has had cancer twice now, and seems well again now. Myself I need a living kidney donor. I am blessed to better empathize because of the journey my life has been. Keep your writing happening, it’s very impactful. God bless.
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