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A Cancer Survivor Raises Awareness With Laughs

By Nancy Larson
From Health magazine

How far can a good laugh take you? Colon-cancer survivor Tammy Figg of St. Louis leans on humor to raise money for cancer research through her Figg Tree Foundation. Its annual event is called the “What’s Up Your Butt Comedy Show,” and its slogan is “How to Keep Your Rear in the Clear.” So far the foundation has raised $88,000. Figg, 33 and in remission, wants people to open up about colon cancer. She talked with Health about facing the disease with candor and irreverence.

Q: What do you hope to accomplish with humor?
A: What the Susan G. Komen Foundation has done with getting people to talk about breasts is what we want to do with colorectal cancer. When we’re successful, you won’t be afraid to tell your doctor if you’re bleeding just because it’s embarrassing to talk about what comes out of your rear.

Q: Did you have a lot of bleeding?
A: Yes. Then I went to the ER, where they did a colonoscopy and found the cancer.

Q: How difficult was the recovery?
A: I wasn’t prepared to have an ostomy bag. When I woke up from surgery, there was a little bit of, “Oh my gosh, what is that?” Next thought: “I’ve got to wear a wedding dress with that?” I was thankful to have the bag reversed after three months. My plumbing now is like it was before, just with a reconstructed rectum. What that means: When I have to go, I absolutely have to go. I started feeling better in a couple of weeks. Later, I had radiation five days a week and chemotherapy, 24 hours a day, on a drip. That was draining.

Q: Are you afraid that the cancer will come back?
A: Once you have had cancer, I don’t think you ever let it go. But I do things that are supposed to lower the risks. I still eat healthy like I did before—fruits and vegetables—and I don’t eat a lot of red meat. Plus, I do kickboxing, work out on an elliptical machine, and lift weights.

Q: You posed in a midriff-baring outfit in the national Colon Club’s “Colander.” What were you thinking?
A: I figured someone would see me and get screened for colon cancer
. I don’t look at my scars and cringe. It’s more like, “Look at this—I’m pretty proud of it.”

Q: How did this crisis affect your marriage?
A: I was diagnosed just six weeks before our wedding, so I was scared. I remember looking at Bryan when I was just out of surgery and saying, “If you want to pick somebody else because I’m kind of broken, I’m OK with that.” He said, “It doesn’t matter if I have you for one day or 100 years. I want to be with you.”

Q: You were able to have a child by doing in vitro. You want more kids?
A: We’d love to, but we also realize that we weren’t even supposed to have one. Each day I look at my son, Ayden, I’m reminded that he’s such a gift. It’s so hard to discipline him!

Q: About 26,000 women will get colon cancer this year. What do all women really need to know?
A: That you should stop worrying so much about the size of your butt and start talking about the health of it. Know your family history, talk about it with your doctor, and get screened when the time is right. And donate to the foundation (www.figgtree.com), too, so we can fund much-needed research.


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Last Updated: July 16, 2009
Filed Under: Mind and Body
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