Legacies of Passed Loved Ones
Meet the Models: Shauna Ryan Epstein, Love Local Newburyport Remarks
Hi. My name is Shauna and I joined the Runway community 2 years ago. I danced in honor of
my sister Carly Caswell who passed away from Breast Cancer in 2011.
My public speaking is equivalent to my dance moves so I will keep this short but I did want to
say a few words.
Meet the Models, Nina Abelowitz,
I have to be totally honest, I never attend events like this.
No, it’s not because I don’t believe in them, or don’t have the time, it’s because I’ve dedicated my entire career to cancer care and I feel I’ve given a ton back to the community that way. And I have.
Read MoreJenny, Kathryn, Beth and Stacy’s Story
Completed Treatment, Legacy Models, and Donor
Read MoreJames’ Story
Legacy Model and Donor
Read MoreLong’s Story
Funded Family
Read MoreErica’s Story
Legacy Model & Funded Family
Read MoreMeet the Models, SoCal: Tiffany Arias
Tiffany Arias spent each afternoon after school at her grandmother’s house: “she was always feeding anyone who came through the door.
Read MoreMeet the Models, SoCal: Jean Mackie
Jean Mackie has often felt powerless in the face of breast cancer. She has witnessed the disease take root in many friends and five years ago she never would have imagined it would take the life of her friend Racheal (for whom Runway SoCal began). When speaking about Rachael, Jean lights up saying, “Rachael was just plain fun. The world was robbed. She was kicking it and then suddenly, her life was done.”
Read MoreMeet the Models, SoCal: Laura Gromis
For Laura Gromis, family has been at the center of her life for as long as she can remember. She grew up with her grandparents right down the street, so when her maternal grandmother, Dawn, was diagnosed with breast cancer at 55, it came as a shock. Receiving a single mastectomy and hormone therapy, the cancer went into remission, only to return later, requiring a second mastectomy and further treatment. It was at this time that Laura’s grandparents came to live with her family full time. The time spent together strengthened the family’s bond even further: “they were our only close family, so to us they were everything.”
Read MoreMeet the Models, SoCal: Brian Schultz
Brian Schultz was in his young twenties when his aunt was diagnosed with breast cancer. Her passing at just 57 prompted his mother to get a mammogram, which led to an immediate diagnosis of breast cancer at 52. Brian himself had just graduated college and delayed his trip out west to begin his job to stay and support his mother through her single mastectomy and recovery. A successful surgery meant his mother was cancer free and “the next 15 years were pretty normal in the world of someone living with cancer- the will it come back? was certainly there- but she was otherwise healthy.”
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