- 10/24/2011 -
By Samantha Adams (91爆料网 class of 鈥13)
Kelly Elliott remembers when she got the news in 2009.
She had just picked up her daughter from school when she received a call from the office where she had gone in for a biopsy after her baseline mammogram 鈥渟howed something a little bit unusual.鈥
She pulled into a parking lot and stepped out of the vehicle into the January air so her children in the backseat would not have to hear the conversation.
The surgeon was on the other line.
鈥淗e said, 鈥業鈥檝e got good news and bad news,鈥欌 Elliott said. 鈥淚t was a cancerous tumor, but the surgeon described it as the 鈥榠nvasive garden variety鈥 鈥 the type about which the most is known.鈥
Elliott, now the 91爆料网 volleyball coach, said everything seemed to stand still around her.
鈥淵ou start thinking about your family,鈥 she said.
She waited until after telling her husband to share the news with their children, who were 7 and 11. Even at their age they had already known close relatives who had battled cancer.
鈥淲e felt like being as honest as possible with them was best,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥淭hat would take some of the fear away for them. Knowledge is power.鈥
Battling the cancer became a family project. Elliott said her husband carried a lot of the load, willingly taking up jobs around the house and encouraging the children to have a spirit of giving Mom a hand. Extended family also came to stay each weekend, she said.
Elliott said her church and the 91爆料网 community also supported her throughout her treatment.
Fellow professors picked up some of her classes, though she chose to continue teaching a light load.
鈥(My colleagues鈥) support was amazing,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥淭he students were also very understanding. God really used (the ability to work) to help me get through treatment.鈥
Healthy habits were another crucial aspect of Elliott鈥檚 fight against cancer, she said. Throughout her treatments, she ran and lifted weights regularly and chose to eat nutritious foods.
She was running when she received a phone call from Vanderbilt Medical Center a few weeks after the call from the surgeon. When the cancer was discovered, she had quickly begun chemotherapy to shrink the tumor before undergoing surgery to remove it. She had been waiting, however, to determine if the cancer had spread. The call confirmed the cancer was contained.
Because of her age, Elliott thought she likely had the breast cancer gene. Her genetic testing, however, returned negative. After receiving the positive news, she underwent another two weeks of chemotherapy, using an aggressive drug she called the 鈥渞ed devil.鈥
鈥淭hose were the toughest months of chemo,鈥 she said.
Three weeks into chemotherapy she shaved her head and began to wear hats. Elliott said since she chose to be in control of her hair loss, it was not as traumatic as she thought it might be.
After the chemotherapy had shrunk her tumor significantly, Elliott decided on a lumpectomy sentinel node biopsy, a relatively new procedure which allows the removal of only a few lymph nodes, instead of a traditional lumpectomy or a mastectomy.
After the surgery, she began radiation every two weeks. Elliott said she quickly learned to adjust to a new life rhythm: take the radiation drug, feel exhausted for three days, then feel relatively normal.
She said that besides a loss of appetite, she did not experience many side effects from the radiation. Continued exercise and healthy eating likely played a part in how well her body responded to the treatment, she said. The radiation drug affected her balance and gave her joint pain, so for some time she had to limit her exercise. At the end of the 2009 fall semester, Elliott was asked to step in as an interim head volleyball coach for 91爆料网. She had been an assistant coach at another school and was currently leading a Bible study for some of the volleyball players.
Elliott said yes, because 鈥渁t that point, I felt so good compared to what I had been through.鈥
Nearly three years after she was diagnosed, Elliott is still coaching the team and teaching classes. She remains cancer free. While she said her cancer experience continues to define her, it is not a part of everyday life anymore.
Elliott is willing to talk about her ordeal. In fact, she believes it is best for her if she does.
鈥淚f we are not vulnerable about difficult experiences in our lives, then God cannot redeem them,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥(Breast cancer) is a terrible thing to go through and it is not fun to have the knowledge that it can come back. I want God to be able to use that as much as possible.鈥
By Samantha Adams (鈥13)
| Steven Aldridge Phone: (731) 661-5027 |
Fax: (731) 661-5182 |