May 14, 2013

Page 13

May 14, 2013

COMMUNITY

Current in Westfield

www.currentinwestfield.com

Westfield duo uses prior illnesses to help conquer the deadly disease

Event Schedule

By Robert Herrington • robert@youarecurrent.com For Westfield Relay for Life co-chairs Shannon Hamerin and Janet Lome, this weekend’s event is more than just walking around the high school track surface or wearing purple ribbons. Combined, the two have battled five cancer diagnoses Cover Story and are true survivors and advocates. “We just hate cancer,” Lome said. The week before Christmas in 1996, Lome said she felt a lump and learned she had stage two breast cancer. “It’s the ‘garden variety’ cancer,” Lome said, adding her mother was diagnosed in 1976. According to a Journal of the National Cancer Institute study, women who survive five years after a breast cancer diagnosis have a good chance of remaining cancer-free. Both women almost went a decade before they had recurrences. The pain Lome felt in 2005 turned out to be four tumors in her liver – one being 3x5 centimeter – and a 5x7 centimeter mass in her back. Lome’s doctors decided on an aggressive treatment plan – a 24-hour drip for five straight days at St.Vincent Hospital. Unfortunately the plan did not help the tumors in her liver so she had weeks of additional treatments. “That’s how I started my 50th year – chemo and radiation at the same time,” Lome said. “I went there to heal when others went to die.” “She is not a good patient because she doesn’t have any patience,” Hamerin said of her friend. Because she was a two-time survivor, Lome is screened every three months. On Dec. 15, 2008, she was informed that she had stage four metastatic breast cancer. Metastatic breast cancer cells frequently differ from the preceding primary breast cancer and have often developed resistance to several lines of previous treatment and have acquired special properties that cause them to metastasize to

Members of the community walk around the Westfield Washington Schools’ track during last year’s Relay for Life. (File photo)

distant sites, making them especially dangerous. The prognosis is often poor as distant metastases are the cause of about 90 percent of deaths as a result of breast cancer. Lome is described as a “one percenter” because only one percent of people have survived cancer three times. “She’s a miracle,” Hamerin said. “I only know of one other woman,” Lome said. “I just want to celebrate and live everyday to the fullest.” Hamerin was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1996 at the age of 32. The following year, she met Lome at a support group. “We had the same treatment, same type of cancer, so how could you not be friends?” Hamerin said.

Meet Shannon Hamerin

• Age: 50 • Family: Husband of 30 years, Chuck; son, Chuck; and daughter, Hilary • Job: Hairstylist at Mirror Images • Hobbies: Reading and making blankets • Personal motto/quote: “Faith is huge. You’ve got to believe you can overcome everything.” • What Relay for Life means to her: “I get to work with my best friend to bring the community and my family together.”

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Meet Janet Lome

• Age: 58 • Family: Husband of 29 years, Steven; and son, Josh. • Job: Sales operation manager, Pearson Education • Hobbies: Baking and gardening • Personal motto/quote: “Hope is the strongest word I know.” • What Relay for Life means to her: “Relay for me is about hope. It’s kinda like a do over.”

Relay for Life is 5 p.m. May 17 to 11 a.m. May 18 at the Westfield Washington Schools football stadium track, 326 W. Main St. Those interested in participating can sign-up online at www.relayforlife.org/westfieldin or fill out a form at the event. Anyone interested will not be turned away. This year’s schedule includes: • 5:15 p.m. – Survivor Celebration • 6 p.m. – Opening Ceremonies • 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. – Silent auction, health fair and live music from bands • 6:35 p.m. – Mr. Relay • 10 p.m. – Luminaria Ceremony • Midnight to 6 a.m. – Midnight Madness • 7 a.m. – Yoga • 8 a.m. – Jazzercise • 9 a.m. – Zumba • 9 to 10 a.m. – Autograph session • 10:30 a.m. – Closing Ceremony • 10:45 a.m. – Fight Back Ceremony

Hamerin had a cancer reoccurrence in 2004 and participated in the inaugural Westfield Relay the same year. “I went out there are as a survivor. In 2005, I got on a committee. I was calling Janet to help me with this or that. At the time we had a very small committee, six or seven people, and we all had a lot of hats,” she said. The two served as co-chairs in 2006, 2007 and 2008 before taking two years off and returning in 2011, 2012 and this year. In 2009, the two walked as a team and served on a committee in 2010. “We couldn’t stand it,” Lome said of being away. “We just needed a break. It’s a year-long process.” Lome jokes that she handles the business side of the relay. “I’m the one who basically throws a party,” Hamerin said. The annual Westfield event has topped $900,000 in cumulative funds raised, and the two are already planning for 2014’s “million dollar relay.” “It’s so neat to see how the event has grown,” Hamerin said. “To see the community come together to raise money is amazing. The community just loves getting involved.” “It’s our cancer as well as everyone else’s,” Lome said. “The cool thing about Relay is everyone can participate.” In 2008, Lome’s father was diagnosed with stage four esophageal cancer and the two underwent treatment together. “We had dueling chemo chairs,” Lome said. Unfortunately, cancer has also touched both ladies’ loved ones, including Hamerin’s brother and mother and both of Lome’s parents. “Our experiences have given us the ability to help others and ease their worries,” Lome said. “We know what to look for. We know what to ask.” “One of the reasons why we are so passionate is because it was hard for me to see my brother go through it. We’re so used to being the patient and doing it,” Hamerin said. “I want to help as much as I can because I don’t want any more of my family members to hear ‘You have cancer’ ever again.”


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