Posts Tagged ‘Project Pink’

Ann’s Diary: The Truth About Hooters

After a recent screening of my film The Breast Cancer Diaries at the Patrick Dempsey Center for Cancer Hope and Healing I came home to my husband, kissed my sleeping kids goodnight, put on some comfy clothes and turned on the TV. As I flipped through the copious cable stations the clicker fell upon a sports channel and–I kid you not–the Hooters International Best Breasts Beauty Contest.

Now for the record I have neither the best breasts nor the worst breasts because I lost them to breast cancer–so I have no breasts.

I also chose not to reconstruct them though I was young and had kids and a husband.  I’m a worrier, and I knew I would worry about fake boobs. (And this was a personal decision so if you’ve had reconstruction, as my friends have done, I say more power to you.)

So there I was, jaw on the floor–the best breasts, are you kidding me? It was like the Miss America contest with no redeeming value (I suddenly had  respect for the “what do you want to do to make the world a better place?” question.   At least it tries to have depth.)

And before you worry that I am anti-breasts, let me assure you I am not; I had a pair and I miss them every day. But when they stood in the way of me and the rest of my hopefully long life I had to let them go.  And I learned the hard way just exactly what breasts don’t mean.

They don’t mean that I am a woman. They don’t mean that I am beautiful. They don’t mean that I am better than everyone else because mine are bigger. They don’t mean that the right man will only love me if I have them. They don’t mean happiness. They don’t mean I am sexy. They don’t mean I am healthy. And they don’t mean I will live a long and successful life.

Of course having breasts is typical; not having them is not. And my husband has been an angel to deal with this difficult challenge in his marriage to me. But he loves me, so he’s doing it. Yet had “hooters” been as important to him as they were to the people on that TV screen I was watching, I would be divorced by now. And who wants that? 

So I watched these beautiful young ladies with tops that jiggled on the contest stage, hoping their name would be called as Miss Best Hooters or whatever, and I thought–oh I hope you know. I hope you find out.  That your breasts, as big and as beautiful as they may be, are not worthy of all this praise. They may take you some place tonight– for the short term–but in life, you are more than your boobs. So very much more.

I don’t care about the Hooters contest personally because I have the wisdom that cancer forced down my throat 6 years ago. But for those young ladies and those oogling them from chairs in the audience, and to all those with clickers in their hands watching from their televisions across the world, I am worried. Who will tell them? How will they know? As I  clicked to another channel, I thought–I hope they find out the truth about Hooters.

Just not the way I did.

Posted August 8th, 2010 by
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Posted in: Uncategorized

Project Pink | Help and Hope | No. 6

Just say no.

There are times when whatever it is, it isn’t what you need right then   Like when well meaning people want to come over and help when really all you want is just to be alone or be with someone else. Just say “no”.  It’s awkward at first but you need to take care of you now–and that means being honest with yourself and with those who love you.

Posted August 8th, 2010 by
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Ann’s Diary: Yellow Crayon

I have been blonde all my life. I have endured the jokes and the 
taunts readily, since they were always leveled by that old saying, 
“Blondes Have More Fun”. Of course, I have no idea if blondes really 
do have more fun, but who cares. When it comes to having yellow 
hair, perception is reality; I’m blonde, therefore I have fun. 

So it was with great distress that I, in my 40’s, watched as my preschool aged daughter, drawing a picture of me, drew my hair and reached for–the brown crayon.

I had been highlighting my head for years as the older I got the less blonde grew. Then all my hair fell out due to cancer treatments and when it came back it was darker than ever. I never thought of it as brown, though, more like “dishwater blonde” (find that in the crayon box)–but now Crayola had ruined everything I ever thought about my hair color.

With a 4 year old calling my hair brown–not blonde, not cream, not even the color of what pools in a broken dishwasher–I hightailed it to my stylist as fast a my head would go. When I came out of the salon my hair certainly looked brighter–not like it did when I was a kid but certainly lighter than before.

However, the next time my daughter made a picture of me I can’t say 
she grabbed the yellow crayon, either. I can’t say that because she was 
painting. And with her paints, she did take yellow, and spread the glowing
light over the line of my bald head. And I was happy. Until she dipped her paint brush into the color brown and mixed the two together. The result was clearly tan. Okay, so it’s not blonde, but it’s not brown either.

I just hope that “Tans Have More Fun”, too.

Posted August 4th, 2010 by
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Posted in: Ann's Diary

Project Pink Diary | Help and Hope | No. 4

All cancers are not made equal.   

Some cancers are much easier to beat than others. Figure out what you’re up against and then beat it to the ground with education, medicine and hope.  And remember what Maya Angelou says:  ”I can be changed by what happens to me, but I refuse to be reduced by it.”

Posted July 30th, 2010 by
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Ann’s Diary: Cash For Cancer

Did you hear about the woman who claimed to have cancer to make money?  It sounds like the beginning of a bad joke.  Here’s the link: Claiming Cancer, Committing a Crime.

If you get to the tail end of this article without exploding, you will read that her lawyer claims she has a mental disorder. I would think so. Anyone who uses cancer in order to make cash has a problem beyond what I can determine. 

I promise not to go crazy on this person, after all, if she does have a mental problem then that’s awful. But mental or not, you can’t take one of the worse things that can happen to a life and twist it up and into your way of stealing other people’s money. Talk about taking the bang out of a donated buck.

So I hope all the people who gave her money can find some solace in the fact that I, a cancer survivor, thank them from the bottom of my heart for their compassion. And I ask them to hang in there for the rest of us real survivors, who leaned on other people’s time, cash and compassion during what was obviously the worst time of our lives. That kind of help and support made my pain a tiny bit more manageable, and six years later, I am still very, very grateful.

So I tip my hat to you and I am sorry you got mixed up in somebody’s alleged mental problem. The love you put behind those written checks or hard earned cash means something to me, who didn’t even receive them. You gave money to a fake cancer survivor and a real cancer survivor thanks you for it. 

I hope that knowledge puts some of the bang back into your stolen buck.

Posted June 30th, 2010 by
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Posted in: Ann's Diary