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Donna Terrell’s Yoga Warriors Fighting Colon Cancer

The second annual Donna Terrell’s Yoga Warriors Fighting Colon Cancer (YW) event was a huge success.  Our community-wide free event was held at the DoubleTree Hotel in downtown Little Rock.   We doubled our attendance from last year and raised more money  – over $5,000 that will buy liquid nutrition for cancer patients in Central Arkansas.  As some of you may know, the driving force behind this event is my daughter Queah (pronounced Quaya) who died from colon cancer four years ago.  In the six weeks leading up to the YW event I shared the stories on Fox 16 News of my daughter and many other people who are cancer survivors or affected by the disease in some way.  I have discovered in my story telling we all have a message that can resonate with people in different ways.  My belief has always been that through the awareness these stories bring – and the YW event itself –  we just might be able to save a life or make someone’s journey though cancer a little easier.

A few days before our April event I finished up the 9PM newscast and went back to my desk to check emails. In my in-box was a message from a lady who wrote – “I wanna say thank you for the many reports on colon cancer in the memory of your daughter”.  The email went on to say –  “I was having blood in my stool, was embarrassed to go to the doctor and after hearing your stories about your daughter I broke down and went to the doctor”.  The email explained how the doctor suggested a colonoscopy. Through that procedure it was discovered the woman had over 100 pre-cancerous polyps in her colon.  She told me her doctor said her only option was to have her colon removed. The email said…”he (doctor) said it would have turned into cancer if I did not have it removed.   I am so grateful to you and your daughter for helping me”.  For a moment after reading the email I was in shock.   Then I went from tears to disbelief thinking maybe someone was playing a joke on me.  I responded to her email and spoke with her a few days later.

Yes – her story was true.  She is still recovering from her surgeries and having follow up visits with her doctors. The best news is she’s alive and cancer free!
So indeed our YW event was a success.  We introduced some people to yoga who had never tried it before and they were able to experience some of its benefits. We created an awareness to early detection for all cancers and we encouraged our YW participants to lead a healthier lifestyle.  We also raised enough money to make an impact on the lives of some of the people currently struggling with the downside of fighting cancer. And just as I had hoped YW and the awareness it brings saves lives!

My Mother’s Breast Cancer

Around this time of year I am often reminded of how far we have come in raising awareness about breast cancer. How easy it is for us to have open discussions about it. How we celebrate survivor-ship and how we remind our friends and family members to do self breast checks and get mammograms.

Many years ago my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. Looking back she never really told me what was going on but that something was wrong and she believed God would take care of her. I was living and working in another state at the time – so when I came home and discovered she had a radical mastectomy I was shocked and heartbroken. I saw where her breast had been removed. She also showed me her prosthesis – back then it was an object shaped like a small pillow, stuffed with material that she placed inside of her bra. I kept thinking why did I not realize the extent of her surgery. How could I have not known.

She was right – God did take care of her and allowed momma to become and 11 year breast cancer survivor. Those years were full of life and the breast cancer never returned. She eventually died from another form of cancer that doctors told us was not connected to the breast cancer.

Not long after she died my aunt and I were talking about my mom – her only sister. We were reminiscing about her life and impact on all of us. I said to my aunt “well, after momma had breast cancer…” and before I could finish the sentence my aunt looked at me in shock and said “breast cancer? I didn’t know sister had breast cancer!” She then began to cry. After all the time these two sisters spent together living in the same town – after all the phone conversations, holidays spent together, family dinners and going to church together she never knew her only sister was a breast cancer survivor.

Over the years I have come to understand why I didn’t know the extent of momma’s surgery. I never realized she would lose a breast because she didn’t want me to know. It was too personal – too private and she was too fearful to talk about it openly. We all know there was time when women didn’t talk too much about female medical issues. It was taboo in our society.

I am grateful to Komen for helping us lift the veil of secrecy and talk about breast cancer. Being able to share the news with friends and especially family members has saved many lives. Thanks to Komen we have come so far in raising awareness and money for research. And thanks to research we have made tremendous strides in eradicating this disease. Let’s keep putting one foot in front of the other through events like The Race For The Cure. We’ll get to our destination – it’s just a matter of time.

Time

If time heals all wounds then how much time does it take?  I find myself thinking about this often because I still spend a lot of time thinking about my daughter who died from colon cancer.

As I ponder this question I am faced with yet another.

CNN’s Anderson Cooper used the word closure to describe what it must have felt like for families of the victims of the Malaysian Airlines plane that was struck down in Ukraine.  When the remains of some of the victims arrived in the Netherlands he said perhaps this will give closure.  It made me think – what gives a grieving person closure and how much time does it take.  Admittedly, I think about healing more so than closure in relationship to my daughter’s death but since this word is often tossed around it got me thinking.  The dictionary describes closure as a feeling that an emotional or traumatic experience has been resolved.  Losing a significant loved one is indeed emotional.  And depending on your relationship with that person and how they died – as one grief counselor told me – can for some people cause symptoms very much like post traumatic stress disorder.  One of my co-workers told me that for her closure is like ending a chapter in a book.  You can now move on to the next pages.  But it’s okay to go back and look at the previous chapter.  I like her definition but how do you get there?

I was touched by the words of one of our station interns.  Melissa told me when she was twelve her sister was murdered.  I think we can agree something like that is especially traumatic for a young  child.  For years Melissa carried the pain, anger, confusion and sorrow like an open wound.  She found very little comfort until an entire decade later when she finally gave up and as she described “put it in God’s hands.”  Up until then it seemed knowing was her worst enemy.  Knowing her sister’s killer and how and why the killing happened did little to provide comfort or closure.  And the words – she’s in a better place now – didn’t help either.  Finally she exhausted herself from carrying the mental weight of knowing.  In her mind she transferred that burden on to the person she believed caused her sister’s death.  She told me he will have to live with knowing and suffer through it – because she could suffer no more.  And just like that she had closure.  Interestingly, it took about as many years as she knew her sister in life to get there.

I suppose one could argue that closure comes once you’re exhausted from carrying the emotional weight or burden.  Maybe it comes when you realize there’s nothing more you can do.  That’s when you’re able to finish the chapter and move on to the next.  If you’re a religious person I suppose it’s called putting it in God’s hands.  As for how long it takes to get there – perhaps as long as you and your loved one were connected in life.

For me – I’m still not concerned about finding closure.  I don’t feel I need it – but I am curious about it.  It’s been three and a half years and there are still triggers that take me back to that painful night I watched my daughter die.  I think about so many things and often feel sad she’s not with me.  Time has done little to heal that.

But it has helped.

My daughter entered my life when I was a teenager so I’m left with nearly a lifetime of memories.  It makes me wonder if it will take a lifetime to heal.  Image that – a whole lifetime.   It gives me comfort knowing I can live with that thought.  Maybe that’s what you call closure.



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About Donna…

Donna Terrell On the FOX16 News set Donna Terrell is a News Anchor in Little Rock, Arkansas. She currently anchors the weekday 5:30PM, 9PM newscasts for Fox16. Read Donna's Bio Here

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