Not long after my breast cancer diagnosis, I called my health care plan. Even though I didn’t think that I wanted reconstruction, researching it was a good distraction from my fear that I would not live long enough to raise my two children.
“Hello,” I said. “I’m calling to see if you cover plastic surgery after a mastectomy.”
“What do you mean, plastic surgery after a vasectomy?” a female voice replied.
I gulped and tried again. “Does my insurance cover reconstruction after a mastectomy?”
“You mean, you want to reverse a vasectomy? she asked.
“No, no,” I said, struggling to go on. “I have breast cancer. I am going to have a breast removed. Will the insurance cover reconstruction of a new breast?”
“Oh,” she said, “Of course, of course.”
I hung up the phone and sat there, stunned. Then, I laughed. This cancer journey is going to have some absurd moments, I thought.
Now, almost 14 years later, I go around one-breasted, my children are in college, and I am grateful to still be laughing.
(This appeared in the magazine Heal: Living Well after Cancer, Vol.1, No. 2, Fall 2007)
© Pam Roberts
Pam Roberts is a writer and artist who facilitates Spirit of the Written Word writing workshops for people touched by cancer or loss. A breast cancer survivor, Pam also presents One in Eight: The Torso Project, a workshop and art installation for women affected by breast cancer.