A Diet to Die For! Breast Cancer in Canada.

January 18, 2011

Airport Gets Boobie Prize for Senior Citizen Strip Search

Prosthetic Breast Gets Airport Security Up In A Little Old Lady’s Grill …

Shamefully, airport security in Calgary felt it was a good idea to strip search an 82 old woman because she didn’t declare her prosthetic as a liquid item.

I’m so glad I decided not to take my prosthetic with me on a recent trip to Las Vegas … more than likely I would be in jail because I can be quite cantankerous. I certainly have the utmost respect for authority, but man, I would be dropping F-Bombs all over the place if they would have embarrassed me during a body scan.

When are we humans treated as innocent first? Could they not have been courteous and respectful before asking her about the prosthetic?

Yes, there may be crooks, creeps, liars, thieves and all kinds of criminals wandering through the airport (and the streets and hallways of anywhere in the world), but do we have to be treated as if we’ve done something intentionally wrong all the time?

When is it just a mistake?

It’s shameful. It’s Canada.

Here’s a few links to the story:

A new low in the name of security.

September 9, 2009

Mammo for the Uni-Boob. Digi-Tits Comes to Toronto.

Even though I don’t have a lot of faith in traditional mammography, I will continue to have annual mammograms and go for annual check-ups with my family doctor … and check-ups with my oncologist, too.

I had my annual mammogram for the uni-boob yesterday, together with more blood work … and I still have a lot more blood work to do within the next week or so.

After I shared my story about my so-called normal mammogram a year ago, and a few weeks later I was in a lot of pain, the technican shared her story …

She told me about her mother’s ovarian cancer 7 years ago. She shared with me that her mother did as I do and gets annual physicals and did all “the right things”.

Her mother had her physical, including a pap smear, in February of that year 7 years ago and everything appeared to be normal. A few months later in June, she keeled over in pain while cooking a meal for her family.

Six weeks later, her mother was dead. A tumour had grown so large that chemotherapy could not reduce its size nor save her life.

The technician said in 10 years, I’m the 2nd woman she knows that a mammogram didn’t see the cancer growing inside me. She said she does 21 mammograms a day … over 100 in a week … over 5,000 mammograms a year. That’s over 50,000 mammograms she’s done.

I’ll stop buying lottery tickets now since my odds are really horrible.

I was telling her about my blog and that I want to share as much information with other women as I can who may not be aware of women like me … and perhaps save a life or 2 … or at least get women to ask a lot of questions during annual examinations.

I told her about the digital mammography that’s available and seems to be only available in the USA. She said they are getting their first machine next week! She said there will be lots of false positives because it’s new technology. The images will be so clear that technicians and doctors won’t know what they’re looking at because they haven’t seen such clear images before.

I’ll take a false positive and have multiple mammograms any day over cancer! My life is not inconvenient.

Thankfully digi-tits comes to the Toronto area!

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