Tomorrow is…Melanoma Monday! Woo hoo, you say. I’m sure I
can hear you say that. Some people will be wearing orange tomorrow, and
possibly a black melanoma bracelet. I haven’t decided yet if I will participate
only because I don’t own a lot of orange. It’s one of those cruel ironies that
I do happen to look good in orange if I have a tan—and I really haven’t had
much of a tan in years.
In honor of Melanoma Monday, I’ll tell you the story of
getting mine diagnosed. I hear more woo-hooing, don’t I?
It’s pretty well known that it’s important to have “ugly
duckling” moles checked out. But mine wasn’t terribly ugly. And it wasn’t what
I’d call a mole. It was just a tiny, figure-eight-shaped spot that appeared
several years ago and was different from everything else I have—and there’s a
lot to choose from. It had two melanoma markers right off the bat, though:
asymmetry and uneven color distribution.
What shook
me awake—in more ways than one—was the nightmare. In it, I was sitting on the
porch of an old college roommate on a warm summer evening in shorts when she
very gently told me I had something that I needed to have a doctor
look at. When I looked down, I had two, four-inch-long mushrooms sprouting from
my leg in the shape of that figure eight.
It was the nightmare that spurred me to make an appointment
to attend one of those free skin cancer checks sponsored by a local hospital.
The doctor took a quick glance and told me it was nothing.
“Are you sure?” I asked. “Because it doesn’t look like
anything else on my body, and clearly I have a lot on there. Do you mind
looking again?”
She was probably in her late twenties. I know what it is to
be young and not taken seriously by patronizing people over 40, so I’d tried to
be very, very polite. But she let me know by not looking at the skin thing
again that she was offended that I’d question her abilities. “Really,” she
said. “It’s nothing.”
“But it’s asymmetrical,” I said. “And varying colors. And it
just appeared and is getting bigger.”
She carefully explained, in a tone that let me know just
what she thought of doddering middle aged laypeople with weird things on their
legs, that discolorations such as mine can appear “even as we age,” and they
are nothing. “It’s okay. Really.” Clearly I was overreacting.
Except I was reluctant to leave. It slipped out. “But…I had
a nightmare.”
“Oh.” she said. “A nightmare! Well.” The look on her face
let me know just what she thought of nutbags like me and our nightmares.
Over the years, doctors two, three, and four said something
similar, though most weren’t quite as snide.
So when I thrust my leg at Doctor #5 and she used the “M”
word, I felt like someone had knocked the wind out of me. When I told her about
the four other doctors, she said it probably wasn’t cancerous then. Apparently
benign stuff can and does just become cancerous. I didn’t tell her that Doctor
#4 was only a few months ago. I was afraid she thought I was being litigious or
something. I wasn’t. It’s just been frustrating is all.
What I’ve learned is to tell, don’t ask, for a biopsy if
something doesn’t look, feel, or seem right on your body.
So anyway, happy Melanoma Monday. Whether you wear orange or
not, please do wear your sunscreen. And remember the melanoma markers are as
simple as a, b, c, d, and e:
- A is for asymmetrical shape.
- B is for irregular border.
- C is for changes in color.
- D is for diameter (but don't wait until it's bigger than a pencil eraser if it's of concern to you—I think no one took mine seriously early on because it was so tiny, but obviously catching it early is what saves your life).
- E is for evolving.
If you find out next week that you are terminally ill—and
we’re all terminally ill on this bus—what will matter are memories of beauty,
that people loved you, and that you loved them. ~Anne Lamott, Plan B Further Thoughts on Faith