
ROSEMARY: What brought you to Mayo Clinic Connect?
@alive: I was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and received a stem cell transplant 10 years ago. It was a very scary and lonely time for me. I was only 50 years old, and my youngest son was in 8th grade. I wasn’t ready to die. My doctors didn’t want to discuss my chances of surviving leukemia, so I had to come to grips with the possibility of not surviving. While my family and friends were there to support me through my illness, I knew that they had their own lives to live and I had to experience all the pain and suffering on my own.
I met my first AML survivor and a stem cell transplant recipient three months into my chemo treatment. She was a young college sophomore, who was a 5-year AML survivor. I was in tears, seeing how alive and healthy she looked. This gave me hope that I may survive as well!
Five years ago, a friend of mine, who is a heart transplant recipient, introduced me to Mayo Clinic Connect. I began to participate because I really wanted to connect with other people who had AML to give them hope and share my experience with them.
ROSEMARY: What motivates you to take part in the community?
@alive: I enjoy sharing and being part of a community of people who have experienced or are experiencing the diagnosis of leukemia and managing stem cell transplant. I also like reading about the latest treatments of AML since there have been so many new discoveries since I was diagnosed 10 years ago. I also want to help other AML patients. Letting newly diagnosed AML patients know that there is hope and life after leukemia and transplant is something that gives me meaning and purpose.
ROSEMARY: What about Mayo Clinic Connect makes you feel comfortable to share and to be open with the community?
@alive: After I had recovered from AML, I found that my friends and family had moved on with their lives and didn’t really want to dwell on my AML journey. However, since this was such a life-changing experience for me, I needed to be part of the AML community. Mayo Clinic Connect helps me have this important connection.
ROSEMARY: What support groups do you participate in?
@alive: I participate in Blood Cancers & Disorders; Bone Marrow Transplant (BMT) & CAR-T Cell Therapy; Cancer: Managing Symptoms; Healthy Living; Just Want to Talk; and Spine Health Support Groups.
ROSEMARY: Tell us about a meaningful moment on Mayo Clinic Connect.
@alive: I’ve had a lot of meaningful moments, especially when I have opportunities to share the information that I wished someone had shared with me when I was newly diagnosed with AML. I had an opportunity to meet a woman online on Mayo Clinic Connect who also had AML and was preparing for her transplant. She was receiving her treatment in Phoenix, where I was being treated. I met with her in person when I was visiting Mayo Clinic there for my own appointment. Unfortunately, this woman contracted a severe infection which overwhelmed her body after her transplant. We spent an hour talking about our leukemia and transplant journeys. We both felt a special connection because of our shared experience. Even though I couldn’t make this woman’s suffering go away, being there for her was very special for both of us.
ROSEMARY: What surprised you the most about Mayo Clinic Connect?
@alive: What surprised me the most is how positive and well-researched a lot of the answers are here. Before finding Mayo Clinic Connect, I participated in other forums that focused on leukemia and stem cell transplant which didn’t provide balanced information and presented only the worst-case scenarios.
ROSEMARY: What energizes you, or how do you find balance in your life?
@alive: Living a full life and helping others energizes and brings balance to my life. I am still working full time as an academic advisor at a university. I also volunteer for a refugee organization and teach English to a group of Sudanese women. I love spending time with my four grandchildren in Minnesota.
ROSEMARY: Tell us about your favorite pastime or activity.
@alive: My favorite activity is to upcycle clothes and to make totes and crossbody bags from used jeans. It’s a new hobby that I picked up a year and a half ago. It brings me much joy when I can give personalized presents to my friends and family that they can’t find anywhere else.
ROSEMARY: Do you have a favorite quote, life motto or personal mantra?
@alive: I read a quote when I was undergoing my chemo that said: “Remember in the darkness what God has shown you in the light.” As a person of faith, I was reminded that the God who was with me and took care of me before my diagnosis was the same God who was with me in the hospital room. I could trust Him regardless of the outcome of my illness. This gave me so much comfort and hope!
ROSEMARY: What do you love about where you live or vacation?
@alive: My husband and I are big-time travelers. We moved to Arizona seven years ago and enjoy our beautiful sunshine but also love visiting Point Lobos – a park just south of Monterey Bay in California. We enjoy traveling to Minnesota to visit my daughter and my grandkids, and we love traveling in Europe.
ROSEMARY: Puppies or kittens?
@alive: I love both kittens and puppies. Right now, we have puppies – two 15 lb. dogs who love to take road trips with me and my husband. I don’t think cats would do well on long trips, otherwise we would have a few as well!
Member Spotlights feature interviews with fellow Connect members. Learn more about members you’ve connected with and some you haven’t met yet. Nominate a member you think should share the spotlight.
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Hi @alive! This is such a wonderful interview. You’re such an integral voice in the AML/SCT discussions in Connect offering support and hope to others going along the same path you’ve taken. I feel as though we are sisters in this AML/SCT odyssey. Thank you for sharing your journey with all of us. It’s very inspirational and motivational! Continued Happy Travels along life’s path…wherever it leads next! ☺️
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6 Reactions@loribmt Thank you! I also feel a deep connection with you. AML definitely changed my life and sent me down a very different path than I planned on going, but it’s been a very meaningful path and a fulfilling life. I can’t say that I’m grateful for my diagnosis, but very often experiences like this strip us of all the trivial things and help us focus on what really matters. That has been my experience!
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3 ReactionsWhat a wonderful interview. I can see your journey as if i was right there. Ten years too. You spoke of the people moving on after your original treatment ended and life went on for them. I think i really felt that as well.
I found this site looking online about BMT's for my MDS. Up popped Mayo with information and a link to Mayo connect. I joined right away. I had friends with cancer, but zero who had BMB's or a BMT.
Thank you for being here. Lori was there to cover the transplant to start, then I found people like you who spoke of the journey forward. All of you have been supportive and helpful in life after transplant on going.
Minnesota!! My dad's family originated from there. I love reading of your husband in you traveling and enjoying life. Possibly engaged in all the activities you wanted to do when you had time. What a blessed story to read.
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4 ReactionsI really enjoyed your interview. It sounds like such a difficult journey. I am glad you made it through, are helping others and have interesting hobbies. I am sure you are a great comfort to people on Mayo Clinic Connect.
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3 Reactions@katgob Thank you for your comment! I remember those first tentative years, when I wasn’t quite sure if I was going to survive.
My first grandson was born a month after my transplant and I was just so excited to be able to meet him. Now he is going to be 10 years old, and I am very grateful to be able to watch him and his younger siblings grow up. Life is good!
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5 Reactions@nrocpop Thank you! Yes, remembering how difficult my first few years were inspires me to help others navigate their transplant journey!
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3 ReactionsThank you for sharing your story. As we always deal with our illnesses, yes, others in our lives really don't want to hear about it anymore other than you saying, "I'm doing good." Connect fills that need as we move along in our lives and make space for out old lives as well as new experiences.
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4 ReactionsWhat a great article/interview ! Your very special attitudes really inspire and give hope ! I find MayoClinicConnect to be a fantastic resource, not only learning but also seeing some beautiful humanity in real life…That does ‘lift my boat’ !
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