Eating Our Way Across the USA

Ed plans our roadtrips by looking for places to eat. He loves eating at unique places; I doubt he has set foot in an Olive Garden since 1989. On our way to the Smoky Mountains, we stayed in Berea, Kentucky. Weeks before our trip, Ed knew that we were going to eat dinner the Historic Boone Tavern Restaurant.

While sometimes it seems like it would be easier to stay by the hotel and eat at a chain restaurant that’s familiar, eating at a local place is a lot of fun. Shortly after we sat down at our table in the Boone Tavern, a server came over to give us our first taste of spoon bread. Neither Ed nor I had ever had spoon bread before. Yum!

When we went to my Dad’s house one Christmas, we thought it would be fun to spend a day at a water park. After spending the day at the Wasserbahn in Central Iowa, Ed informed my whole family that we were going to eat dinner at The Ronneburg Restaurant. Sure, bringing the girls to the water park was fun, but it was the German food Ed was really after. And he was right. The German food at The Ronneburg was outstanding.

North Platte, Nebraska was a stopping point during our drive from Chicago to Estes Park, Colorado. Ed arranged for us to have a hotel room with bunk beds for the girls, and we were going to eat at Whiskey Creek. He knew it was a chain, but the fact that we had never eaten there before made it a good choice.

This past summer, I decided to take a page from Ed’s book. Before our trip to Alaska, I asked my cousin where I should take Ed to eat for his birthday, and she suggested Simon and Seafort’s in Anchorage. I surprised Ed with a reservation and a table by the window. The hostess even sprinkled birthday ribbons on our table! As we were eating, we were able to look out at Cook’s Inlet and Mount Susitna, “the sleeping lady.” It was a wonderful evening!

Captain James Cook and Ed
Mount Susitna

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The Essay That Didn’t Win

Last month, I entered an essay contest in the hopes of winning two Valetta camisoles from Amoena. I was supposed to write how I’ve changed my life since my breast cancer diagnosis and treatment, with the title “This is the New Me.” Since I was diagnosed so young, I don’t feel like I’ve worked to change my life, but changes certainly have happened. I decided to go for it. However, two other worthy essays were chosen. I’m looking forward to reading them in the Amoena Lifelines blog! Here is my non-winning essay.

This Is the New Me

I barely even knew who I was when I was sat alone in my car, tears rolling down my cheeks after my first mammogram. After I was rushed to a surgeon’s office to discuss having a lumpectomy. I hardly even knew myself.

I thought I knew. I had a successful career; had just received a Master’s degree and had a new boyfriend. I thought I knew who I was.

As I entered the OR, I still had hope that this was all a terrible mistake. As I was wheeled out, I knew that nothing would be the same. Nothing was the same.

Before my diagnosis, these were the kind of decisions I had to make: Which apartment should I rent? What car should I buy? Should we go to Red Lobster or Baker’s Square for dinner? Apple pie or French silk? Now, I was faced with life impacting decisions. Life changing decisions. Lumpectomy or mastectomy? Radiation and chemo, or just chemo? To take tamoxifen or deny it? These were all decisions I had to make on my own. No one could suggest that the soup of the day was excellent when the soup du jour was a red liquid that coursed through my veins to seek out and kill fast multiplying cells.

I was 27 when I was calling insurance companies to arrange for treatment, researching all the medical options open to me and shopping for a wig. My pregnant friend was complaining about morning sickness; I was nauseous and couldn’t eat because I was a cancer patient. As I write about my experience, I can hardly believe I rose to the occasion.

But arise I did. Having breast cancer made me a little bolder, a little more confident.

I made decisions based on keeping my body healthy and strong. I opted for a mastectomy and chemo to avoid radiation, since I still wanted to have children. I joined a step aerobics class and every time I kicked or punched, I was driving those cancer cells out of me. I ate broccoli and avoided soy. I wrote notes to remind me to take my Tamoxifen twice a day.

My confidence grew in other areas of my life as well. If I faced a difficult or nerve wracking experience, I told myself, “I fought cancer. I can do this.” When my brother was in a motorcycle accident and was hospitalized for six months, I was able to work with his employers and insurance company, drawing on my own experiences.

The dream to have children remained. My doctors thought there was no reason why I shouldn’t have children. But I wondered about my fertility. Would children even be possible? Oh, yes, let’s not forget I still needed someone to father my children. The boyfriend hadn’t lasted.

Dating was the one area in my life where I was not confident at all. Telling a man that I had lost a breast to cancer was not the least bit sexy, and little too much information for a first date. Before one date, I made myself practically sick with worry. How was I going to bring up this sensitive topic? “Oh, by the way, I’m a cancer survivor…” All that worry was for nothing; that guy stood me up.

Then along came a man who was gentle and kind and a trombone player to boot. He liked me for me, and when the time came, I was nervous but able to tell him my secret.

Sixteen years after those tears on the steering wheel, THIS IS ME: I am a wife and a mother to two precious girls. I am a healthy, confident, WHOLE woman who is missing nothing out of life. I write a blog telling about my breast cancer experiences. I write about becoming a mother after breast cancer to give hope to other young women diagnosed with breast cancer.

Just recently, I came across the blog of a 26 year old woman. I saw myself in her; she is worried sick about what breast cancer treatments have done to her fertility. I wrote her a long comment, telling her my story to give her hope for her unknown future.

She replied, “Your comment literally warms my heart. I LOVE hearing about people like you. Thank you so much for sharing your story and for giving me a little more hope. Seriously LOVE this!”

This is the new me; mother, survivor, encourager. I know the New Me quite well, and I like her.

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