“The only way through it is through it.”
Breast cancer survivor Kristin Harmel had the first letters of each word in this phrase engraved on a ring in December 2022 as a reminder during her upcoming three-month chemotherapy treatment of how she planned to fight through the most difficult chapter of her life.
“When I heard the words, ‘You have cancer,’ I immediately thought of my six-year-old son and how this would impact his life,” Kristin says. “I knew I needed to do all I could to make sure my cancer never returned. ‘The Only Way Through It Is Through It’ became my mantra.”
This New York Times best-selling author found herself writing an unexpected, rather scary chapter in her personal story. It started two months earlier when she went into AdventHealth Imaging Center in Winter Garden, Florida, United States, for her standard mammogram.
“The only reason my cancer was caught is … I went in for my regular mammogram,” Kristin says. “I didn’t feel a lump.”
The week after, Kristin, 43 at the time, with no relevant family history and no genetic markers, found herself sitting in disbelief in the office of Anupama Saigal, a breast surgical oncologist with the AdventHealth Cancer Institute in Winter Park, preparing for a biopsy.
“Dr. Saigal and her team went above and beyond from the beginning,” Kristin says. “A team member named Karen actually skipped her lunch to fit my biopsy in that day, which was tremendously kind. I remember Dr. Saigal saying, ‘I’ve got you; you’re going to be OK,’ which was comforting.”
“Kristin had fibrocystic changes, and after a biopsy, we were all shocked she had cancer,” Saigal says. “She had a small surgery, preserving her breast, but due to the aggressive nature of the cancer cells, she underwent both chemotherapy and radiation.”
Over the months ahead, Kristin would find herself in the fight of her life, much like the female characters she writes about in her historical fiction novels.
“I write stories about strong women who face difficult times and, in the darkest hours, find light and strength within themselves, usually set during World War II,” Kristin says.
When she was diagnosed, her publishing team rallied around her and pushed the deadline for her upcoming book, The Stolen Life of Colette Marceau, back a year.
“I tried to write during my cancer treatments, but that side of my brain just wasn’t firing. It was a real loss of identity, and I feared it might be permanent,” Kristin says. “Others told me it was just chemo brain, and luckily they were right.”
From December 2022 through March 2023, Kristin underwent chemotherapy, doing an infusion every three weeks, and in April 2023 she started radiation treatment at AdventHealth Winter Park.
“In Kristin’s case, getting ultrasound imaging in addition to her mammogram was key to catching it early and saving her life,” Saigal says. “Because of her dense breast tissue, had she not gotten both types of imaging, her cancer could’ve been missed and turned into stage three very quickly.”
Saigal encourages all women to be an advocate for themselves by being proactive and getting screened early and regularly, asking about family history and how it plays into risk, and asking about having dense breast tissue and how that affects imaging and treatment.
The American Cancer Society recommends that screening start at the age of 40 for women with no personal or family history and no genetic markers. However, mammograms should start earlier if a close relative has been diagnosed.
“If your mother got breast cancer at 46, then you should start at 36,” Saigal says. “In addition, you would be considered high risk, and I would recommend having an ultrasound, and in some cases an MRI, added to your regular mammogram, but separated six months apart.”
Saigal also urges lifestyle modifications to help prevent breast cancer.
“We can change our diet, our activity levels, and control what we put into our bodies, medications included,” Saigal says. “These things, along with the manipulation of the female reproductive system for an extended long period of time, are pushing those cells to sort of go a little haywire.”
For Kristin, she feels like herself again and now has a new lease on life — and a new perspective.
“The first thing we think of when we hear the word cancer, I think, is our own mortality. But a diagnosis doesn’t mean you’re going to die; it means you’re going to go through a difficult journey. It also means you’ll discover strength you didn’t know you had along the way.
“If you take one thing away from my story, I hope it’s that if you’re overdue for a mammogram, you should call your doctor to schedule one today,” Kristin says.
When her personal breast cancer chapter closes through living life, processing, and healing, look for Kristin to continue speaking publicly about her breast cancer experience to remind her readers worldwide how important it is to stay vigilant about their own health.