I’m Regina
Lawry, from Mena, Arkansas. I’m a
caregiver and I’m 1 out of 7.
I’m the only
one in my immediate family that has never had a cancer diagnosis.
When I was a
little girl in the early 60’s I went out collecting money for ACS with my
mother. At that time the ACS would send
out envelopes and ask people to take them around their neighborhoods. I can remember asking her why we were doing it
and she would tell me, “You never know who it might help.”
In 1975 she
was diagnosed with leukemia. In the 70’s
leukemia was a death sentence. There was
no treatment.
She would
get so weak. I remember her coming to my
house one day and she was too weak to even open the screen door. It was as if mom’s blood would just
disappear.
At that time the only thing
they could do for her was to give her platelets or whole blood. They were giving her several units of whole
blood and or platelet every week.
It was the
ACS that developed apheresis (the technology to separate the platelets from the
whole blood). This technology is used in
many other medical applications also.
At that time
the family was responsible for replacing the blood that was used for her. We all donated and were always scrambling to
find other donors. The Local ACS office
donated over 100 units in her name. I’m
not saying that this is a service that is provided by ACS. It’s just how much they care.
The doctors
decided to remove her spleen and hopefully stop the loss of blood. While she was in the hospital they asked her
to participate in a bone marrow study.
They were studying the progression of the disease. She was told that it would not benefit her,
but would hopefully help others later on.
They told
her that it was painful. It was done
with a local and they had to drill into the hip bone and remove the
marrow. We tried to talk her out of it,
but she insisted that she would do it.
She said, “You never know who this might help.”
In December
of 1976 she lost her battle with cancer.
In the
summer of 1996 (20 years later) a bone marrow transplant saved my sister
Lenora’s life. In February of that year
she was diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer.
I took care
of her 6 weeks during her transplant. It
was the hardest thing I have ever done.
As a caregiver you are completely exhausted all of the time and you are
watching some you love go through something so difficult. My brother
Duane was her stem cell donor.
ACS is still
funding platelet and stem cell research.
The ACS does NOT fund embryonic stem cell research. I repeat the ACS does NOT fund embryonic stem
cell research. That was important to me.
A few years
later my sister Roberta was diagnosed with bi-lateral breast cancer and
underwent a double mastectomy along with chemotherapy. She is still cancer free.
Not long
afterwards my sister Bunny was diagnosed with breast cancer and chose to have a
double mastectomy. It was caught early
and no further treatments were required.
After
Roberta’s treatments and recovery she became involved in Relay for Life in
Enumclaw, Washington. She invited all of
us to come to Enumclaw and support her in the Relay. We all went, because that’s the kind of
family we are and we wanted to help her through her healing process.
I cannot
tell you what it meant to me when I watched my siblings walk arm and arm around
that track in the survivor lap. Then
when I saw my mother and my father’s luminary bags during the luminary ceremony
I knew it was something that I had to be a part of.
I returned
to Enumclaw for a few years for Relay.
Then one day I got a luminary form in my bank statement. They were having a Relay in Polk County. I called the number on the form, signed up a
team, raised $7000 and have been the chairman of the Polk County Relay for 5 years.
Not too long
ago on Facebook I saw that my cousin Michael was diagnosed with leukemia and
was getting ready to undergo a bone marrow transplant. I called him and we talked about my mother and
what she had done. We cried and we
laughed. 36 years later bone marrow and
stem cell research is still saving lives.
The money
that is raised helps long term. We may
not see the results today but ACS researchers save thousands and thousands of
lives. I know, because I’ve seen it
first hand through things like Blood apheresis, bone marrow studies, stem cell
research and various drugs and chemotherapies.
So why do I
Relay? It’s my legacy. I want my grand-children to know what my
mother did for love. She would have
endured it all for a stranger, but ended up doing it for those she loved. I want there
to be treatments if they ever need them.
I’m Regina
Lawry and I Relay BIG in Polk County, Arkansas.
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