I called my family to say I had breast cancer. Mom said, “We’re in the middle of your cousin’s bridal shower.” I went through chemo alone. Days later, they came asking if I could still co-sign my sister’s car loan. My 6-year-old son came ou
When I called my mother to tell her I had breast cancer, she picked up on the third ring and lowered her voice as if I were interrupting something important.
“Claire, we’re in the middle of your cousin Jenna’s bridal shower,” she said. I could hear laughter behind her, glasses clinking, someone calling for ribbon scissors. “Can this wait?”
I was standing in the hospital parking lot, a folder clutched in my hand, a biopsy report that had just split my life into before and after. My knees were shaking so badly I had to brace myself against my car.
“No,” I said. “It can’t wait. I have cancer.”
There was a pause—but not the kind I had imagined. Not shock. Not grief. Just annoyance, like I’d brought up a plumbing issue in the middle of dessert.
