How Thinking Like a Champion Helped Olympic Gymnast Shannon Miller Fight Cancer
In 2011, 15 years after Miller helped the USA win its first women's gymnastic team competition at the 1996 summer games in Atlanta, Georgia, her doctor found a baseball-sized cyst on one of her ovaries during a routine exam, and she was diagnosed with a rare form of ovarian cancer. At the time, she was 34 and a new mom to a one-year-old son.
Harder still, the discovery came just three years after her mother received her own cancer diagnosis, which offered the fitness pro her "first real glimpse into how cancer affects a person and their family," says Miller. She sought treatment, which involved undergoing surgery to remove one of her ovaries and fallopian tubes and aggressive chemo. Six years later, she's cancer free and is now an advocate for women's wellness, as well as the author of It's Not About Perfect: Competing for my Country and Fighting for my Life.
So what's one piece of advice she offers to other women facing similar odds? Never underestimate the power of positive thinking: "I relied on that competitive mentality to help me during some of the most difficult parts of treatment and recovery. You rely on perseverance, a positive attitude, and teamwork—I knew that it wasn’t about the stumbles as much as about the importance of getting back up." In short, it's what she calls her will to not only survive, but thrive.
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If you have a loved one who's been diagnosed with cancer and could use some advice on how to support them, this story is a must-read. As is this one about how the activewear brand Athleta is helping survivors get back into fitness.
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