Relaying a positive message by example
June Casagrande
Judy Franco has looked a killer in the eye and, instead of shrinking
in fear, has risen to battle and emerged victorious. But her conquest
over a killer doesn’t make her unique. On the contrary, Franco, a
longtime school board member, is one of many who have confronted and
survived cancer.
“I think I knew that I had breast cancer before the doctors
verified it, so my attitude was that I have too many things left to
do, so let’s knock this out, let’s get rid of it,” Franco recalled of
her diagnosis in 2001. “That’s the way I approached it from the
beginning, this was something that was just another hurdle in the
road of life and it was something to fight and to win.”
That same year, after chemotherapy and radiation treatments,
Franco was declared cancer free.
Now, she has a message to share. As a living example of hope to
cancer survivors, Franco was the first to sign on as an honorary
survivor for this year’s Newport Beach Relay for Life Cancer
Fundraiser.
Today and Saturday, the Relay for Life returns for a third year to
Newport Beach. The all-night walk/run takes place at the field at
Newport Harbor High School, where walkers and runners take turns
representing their teams on a track. The event includes a “Luminaria”
candle-lighting ceremony in honor of people who have died of cancer.
And every year, several honorary survivors are chosen to kick off the
event with a speech and to stand as symbols of what hope can do.
“It shows people that there’s hope; it shows people they can
survive,” said Pat Smith, chairwoman on the Relay’s Honorary
Survivors Committee.
Smith, also a cancer survivor, was chairwoman for the past two
years of the event that raises awareness of cancer and funds for
cancer research. After having beaten ovarian cancer 16 years ago,
Smith learned recently that the cancer has returned and spread to her
lungs.
“It’s amazing the medical advances they’ve made in the last 16
years,” Smith said. “For this relay, three quarters of the funds we
raise go to research. And all the time I’ve been involved, little did
I know that the research would be helping me.”
Like Franco, Smith believes that determination and a positive
outlook are the most powerful tools in her arsenal.
“I beat it 16 years ago and I’ll beat it again,” Smith said.
Positive outlook is also what keeps the event going and growing.
“The event is expanding and growing throughout Newport-Mesa,”
Franco said. “It’s really positive to have the community coming
together like this to raise awareness and also to raise the funds to
search for a cure.”
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