4 minute read
Beck's simple message: #Checkyourboobs
BECK Lewis has breast cancer, but she doesn’t want your sympathy. She wants you to check your boobs. And that’s you blokes as well.
In October last year, the 41-year-old was happily looking forward to a few weeks of long service leave, after working as a casual for seven years, mostly at That Bargain Place, and also Brick Lane Bazaar, both in Daylesford.
But finding “a weird lump” in her underarm eventually put paid to some muchearned time off. Beck knew something was not quite right but friends and family told her she was too young to worry about breast cancer. “Many people told me it was just a cyst and I was overreacting,” she said.
Beck put the doctor’s visit off for six weeks but after feeling it again, and knowing in the back of her mind she had to take action, made the call. It was just as well she did.
“I had an ultrasound and the woman doing it was all chatty and there seemed to be no worry about that lump but then she went a bit quiet after finding another one in the upper part of my breast. A week later I got a call to go to Ballarat Base Hospital for more scans and they booked me in for an ultrasound which led to multiple mammograms and more ultrasounds. And in the afternoon, a half hour core biopsy followed by another mammogram after inserting a tiny marker, called a magseed. You know then something is really wrong.”
One week later, on January 19, Beck returned to see a doctor. She and her very supportive partner Aaron Reading waited 40 minutes, and just as he left for a quick toilet break, the doctor walked in with a McGrath Foundation breast nurse to share the bad news. She asked them to wait for Aaron’s return.
“That is when the shock set it and I didn’t really know what shock was before that. I remember looking at the wall, trying to process everything, this was happening to me, looking at the wall again, trying to process again. I was shaking and then the tears came. I didn’t want them to, they just came. They told me 10 women received the same news as me, in that building, that day.”
Beck was fast-tracked for surgery just four days later with no time to think about the future. “I just knew I had cancer and it was coming out. During the ultrasound it was measured at 16mm but when it was removed it was 20mm. I was told it had been growing for 10 years, since the age of 31, and had just started to spread over the past two or three years.
“There are three grades - one, two and three, and I had grade two, not good or bad but because I got it relatively early they said it was 99.9 per cent curable. If it had been grade 3 things would be very different. Because I got in early, I avoided chemo. And the radiation is really, just to quote the medical people, to 'mop up' anything left after surgery.”
Beck had a week off work, thanks to that hard-earned long service leave, and then went back to work on light duties for six weeks, waiting and getting ready for radiation treatment. “I had to have 19 treatments in total. Fifteen plus four, they call it. The last four are a different technology, stronger. And the radiation takes place every day except weekends and public holidays. Having Easter and Anzac Day public holidays have extended my treatment.”
Beck is now down to her last few treatments this week and while her breast is red and raw, and likely to start blistering, she does not have pain which she thinks might be because she takes daily antihistamine tablets for a skin issue.
Having daily radiation treatment has “thrown a spanner in the works” to say the least for the woman used to getting up, getting things sorted and getting to work.
Daily trips to Ballarat from Hepburn Springs and back, and waiting for treatment while talking to other patients or reading a book, are not much fun. Less so when one of the two radiation machines breaks down, as happened recently. Despite any malfunctions, Beck is quick to add she has huge admiration for those working at the Ballarat Regional Integrated Cancer Care unit.
It is probably not as much admiration as those around have for her and the way she has taken on her diagnosis and treatment – also taking time for daily updates on social media under #checkyourboobs – with the eye-catching eight-ball emojis. They have already led to many people leaving messages of not just support but “just got my boobs checked – thanks Beck!”.
“I really just want people to check their boobs. Men as well. And if anything feels wrong then go to the doctor, check it out. Follow your intuition, you know your body. And if people say you are too young, or too old, or too healthy, just ignore that and get checked. Don’t put it off. It could save your life.”
Oddly, given all she is still doing to give back with her message while going through treatment, Beck said she had been surprised by the support from her community, friends and family. It’s coming in spades.
“I really want to thank the community, no need to name anyone, they know who they are. And my workplaces, That Bargain Place – I love that place, and Brick Lane Bazaar, have been wonderful. My thinking through all of this is, I am going to get better, it is just a little hurdle, and then I get back to my new normal. And to everyone, please check your boobs!”
Words: Donna Kelly | Image: Luka Spoljaric
PROPOSAL TO UPGRADE TWO TELSTRA MOBILE PHONE BASE STATIONS WITH 4G/5G IN TRENTHAM AND GLENLYON
1. The proposed works consist of:
10 Station St Trentham VIC 3458 https://www.rfnsa.com.au/3458001
• Removal of (6) panel antennas
• Installation of (6) panel antennas 2.533m long and (3) AIR antennas 0.827m long
• Ancillary works including cabling and the replacement of (6) tower mast amplifiers, installation of (3) remote radio units and (3) junction boxes
• Internal works in the existing equipment shelter
28 Molesworth Street Glenlyon VIC 3461 https://www.rfnsa.com.au/3461007
• Installation of (3) AIR antennas 0.827m long
• Ancillary works including the replacement of (6) tower mast amplifiers, installation of (3) remote radio units and (3) junction boxes
• Internal works in the existing equipment shelter
2. Telstra regards each of the proposed installations as Low-impact Facilities under the Telecommunications (Low-impact Facilities) Determination 2018
3. In accordance with Section 7 of C564: 2020 Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment Code, we invite you to provide feedback about the proposals. Further information and/or comments should be directed to: Emily Wardlaw on behalf of Telstra, 0422 685 472, consultation@acquirecomm.com.au by Wednesday 10th May. Further information can also be obtained from www.rfnsa.com.au
Telstra Limited A.C.N 086 174 781 Acquirecomm Pty Ltd A.C.N: 603 876 240