Women begin filing into the empty meeting room in the Radiation Oncology Center at Saint Maryโ€™s Center for Health. They laugh, tease each other and swap garden tips. They range in age, and some wear jeans while others wear business suits. They could be any groupโ€”a book club, a parent-teacher association, a nonprofit board. None of them look sick, but these women have breast cancer. And theyโ€™re here to get on with life.

My erroneous assumptionโ€”that women with breast cancer should โ€œlook sickโ€โ€”is one of the many myths that frustrate these women. By coming together once a week for the On With Life Breast Cancer Support Group, theyโ€™re able to voice those frustrations, vent their anger about their diagnoses, cry, laugh, offer and receive support, become educated, and say everything they canโ€™t say at home, to others who know exactly what theyโ€™re going through.

Liz Thomas, a licensed social worker, has been the On With Life facilitator for nearly 10 years, leading the group meetings every Tuesday from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. She says itโ€™s the only breast cancer support group in Northern Nevada, and its existence is what keeps many women going.

โ€œWe have some women who have had no more than a questionable mammogram and some with terminal diagnoses,โ€ says Thomas. โ€œEveryoneโ€™s welcome here, no matter what they need.โ€

She points to numerous studies showing an increase in positive outcomes among those who attend support groups. She chalks this up to not only the spiritual and emotional benefits that improve patientsโ€™ spirits, but also to the exposure to treatment alternatives, tests the women didnโ€™t know to take or clinical trials in which they might take part.

As the women wait for todayโ€™s session to begin, they discuss the speaker they heard the night before. The issue of spiritualityโ€”one that frequently comes up hereโ€”is addressed. One recalls a difficult moment: โ€œSomeone actually told me, โ€˜You must have committed some terrible sin to have gotten breast cancer.โ€™โ€ Others then speak frankly about their own inner demons and their old fear that somehow theyโ€™ve done something to deserve this.

โ€œIf weโ€™re pissed off, or confused, or afraid, we can say that here,โ€ another woman says. โ€œWe can just let it all out, and no one here is going to judge us.โ€

Jan has been fighting cancer for 11 years and coming to On With Life for nine. She says that at one particular moment of crisis, when she felt too overwhelmed to tend to her garden, 15 On-With-Lifers showed up at her door, ready to work. โ€œThey just get you through it,โ€ says Jan. โ€œWeโ€™re family. We check up on each other.โ€

Not that the group is all about crisisโ€”quite the contrary. โ€œPeople think itโ€™s all doom and gloom around here,โ€ says another participant, Tricia. โ€œPeople think weโ€™re all sitting around here with breathing tubes, but itโ€™s not like that. We have fun, too.โ€

And for some women, On With Life is the only place they can talk about cancer. โ€œOur families often donโ€™t want to talk about it,โ€ says another woman. โ€œThey think itโ€™s dwelling on the negative. But we still need to.โ€

On With Life isnโ€™t all talk. Guest speakers often drop in to share insights and medical information. And the group participates in local fundraising events, like the Relay for Life, the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure, and Moms on the Run.

But most of all, itโ€™s shown these women the unexpected positive side of breast cancerโ€”first and foremost, new friends. โ€œWe have a new appreciation for life,โ€ adds Tricia. โ€œIt forces you to re-evaluate your priorities and to reconnect with your sense of self and your spirituality. So cancer has its gifts.โ€

For information about On With Life, call Liz Thomas at 770-6038.

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