I was at the Dunkin Donuts in Biddeford, Maine recently when I saw one of the breast cancer license plates on a car parked in the lot. I was at the drive-thru, ordering my light-no-sugar, and thought–there’s one of me, one of my cancer peeps.
Of course I didn’t know her (and I’m assuming it was a her, but it could have been a he) but I felt like I did–as happens now when someone tells me they have or had breast cancer. I’m ready to give them the fist-bump of brotherhood, the yup-I get-it, the let-me-buy-you-a-beer reserved for reunions with old friends–and yet they’re complete strangers to me.
But we’re all in the same ‘club’. That’s the way it is with cancer.
So there I was, ordering my divine cup of liquid nectar, when I cast my eyes upon a copy of ‘pink tips’ I had in my car. It had the old white cover with the breast cancer scarecrow on it, and some typos that didn’t get caught the first time editing–but it still held its message. And it was just staring at me, waiting to help.
I said to my husband–’I'll be right back’–and bolted from the stopped car as he looked at me. He had one of those worried faces on, the ‘is-she-so-hot-for-this-coffee-she’s-gonna-jump-the-proceed-to-the-second-window line to get the goods?’ expression–
but he worried for nothing. I wasn’t making a fool of myself storming Dunkies for my drink. I had walked up to the pink-license-plated car in southern Maine and slipped my book under the windshield. Then I turned and left.
I have no idea if that person needed a little boost, or if she knows someone who needs one–but whatever happens, that book went out there. It’s trying to help.
So if you have one of those breast cancer license plates on your car and find yourself ordering up a Coffee Coollatta some day soon and come out to find a pink book strapped to your windshield, you’ll know what it is, who was there, and if you look fast you might hear a cute guy in a silver car shout from the drive-thru “Ann! Not agaaaain!”
But more importantly you’ll know that the person who left that book for you did it to help a peep in ‘the club’.
Because that’s the way it is with cancer.





