GreeneScene Magazine
  • ArticlesNEW
  • Contests
    • Where is This?
    • Person Place or Thing
    • trivia
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company
No Result
View All Result
GreeneScene Magazine
  • ArticlesNEW
  • Contests
    • Where is This?
    • Person Place or Thing
    • trivia
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company
No Result
View All Result
GreeneScene Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Community

From Diagnosis to Advocacy: A Small-Town Cancer Journey

Brittanny Groover by Brittanny Groover
April 24, 2026
in Community
0
Woman in a red coat smiling in the snow with the US Capitol building in the background.
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The following is Part One of a reader’s response to a feature in our April edition.

The biggest lesson I have learned from cancer is that there is no finish line. Not in the way people imagine. You do not cross some magical point where everything goes back to normal and you get your old life handed back to you. Instead, at the very moment of diagnosis, you step into a new starting point. Ready or not, you’re immediately thrown into a new chapter. You’re about to begin creating a new version of yourself you never asked to meet, but you learn to grow into anyway.

As I write this, it is April 8. I just finished reading Bret Moore’s articles in the April issue of The GreeneScene about the big role of the small-town doctor and who killed the small-town doctor. That piece hit me hard. I’m a 32-year-old lifelong Dilliner resident who was diagnosed with Stage 3A melanoma at 27 — just across the bridge, by a small-town doctor: Dr. English.

I now have another small-town doctor, Dr. Heselton in Greensboro, who has been doing everything to keep me alive for the last five years as I have dealt with every side effect the immunotherapy drug Keytruda threw at me, including Stevens-Johnson syndrome — a condition where a medication causes a full-body rash and can quickly shut down organs and become fatal. Yes. Brutal stuff. Terrifying stuff. Too terrifying for a 27-year-old.

I was an 11-year-old student at Bobtown Elementary School when I lost my father to MS at the end of sixth grade. I thought that was the worst thing I would ever have to deal with in my life. At least trauma-wise. I was wrong.

Learning to Navigate

I think I can speak for us all when I say, from the moment of diagnosis, you think you are running toward something: answers, clarity, a white-and-black checkered line. A moment where someone tells you, “OK, you are done.” But the truth is you are walking into a life that keeps unfolding. You learn and grow and change in ways you never expected. And the whole time, in the back of your mind, you are searching for a finish line that does not exist. Cancer does not give you that. It gives you a journey — and that journey becomes part of you forever.

I knew melanoma was skin cancer, but that was about it. I did not know what an oncologist was. I did not understand what “the deadliest form of skin cancer” actually meant. I was still in my 20s. Mortality did not feel real.. minus the dad thing… I thought I was too young to die. Or at least history could not repeat itself. My son was not even six years old… and you’re telling me I have cancer? Impossible. I was wrong again.

Then suddenly I was being slid into PET scan machines. I was waking up from surgeries I couldn’t even pronounce. Doctors talked at me, not to me, using words I had never heard. I did not know what to ask. I did not know where to look for information I could trust. I was scared to search online because I didn’t know what was real and what was misinformation, so I just kept showing up — one appointment at a time. One step at a time. That was all I could do.
Those steps were what taught me. Not the big dramatic moments, but the small, quiet ones — the ones where I was just trying to get through the day.

The Journey

Sometimes other patients look at me funny, sometimes with anger even, when I used the word journey. I understand why. It can sound cliché, or like I’m putting a pretty pink bow on something as horrific as cancer. I’m not doing that. To me, it is the only word that makes sense.

Everyone’s cancer journey is different. Everyone’s path — and pain — looks different. But it is a journey because it changes you. It teaches you. It forces you to grow in ways you never wanted.

It does not end when treatment ends. It does not even end when there’s no evidence of disease. On a personal note: if I can get through 2026 without a recurrence, I will be discharged from treatment completely. For now, I am a survivor of Stage 3A melanoma — the deadliest form of skin cancer — the thing that tried to take me out before I even turned 30.

I decided to learn everything about my diagnosis and become a patient advocate because I felt like I had been in a car crash that went on for two years. When I got out, I had no idea what happened to me or my body. The wild part is that, the whole time I was in treatment, I thought I was Stage 2B. Miscommunication plus an oncologist who assumed I understood more than I did was the root cause. This was someone who had been in the job so long she forgot what it feels like to be brand new to cancer. I did not know the right questions. I did not know the vocabulary. I did not know how to advocate for myself yet. I was just trying to stay alive.

(Part 2 will follow in next month’s edition)

Donation

Buy author a coffee

Donate
Tags: cancer journeypatient advocacypersonal story
Brittanny Groover

Brittanny Groover

Related Posts

No Content Available
Next Post
The Case for Reassessment

The Case for Reassessment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

The GreeneScene Podcast The GreeneScene Podcast The GreeneScene Podcast

Recommended

Group of pharmacy staff posing with an award and balloons inside a retail pharmacy.

McCracken Pharmacy Wins National Award

April 1, 2026
Hummingbird Project 3D Render

Let’s Talk About the Robena Data Center

March 26, 2026
Waynesburg Central High School Logo

Cool At School: WCHS National Honor Society Induction

April 1, 2026
Ambulance with flashing lights driving quickly at night responding to an emergency.

Our Growing Emergency Care Desert

March 27, 2026
Two LEGO models with open sides reveal detailed interior layers and mechanical sections resembling a ship cross section.

Cool at School: Titanic Success at Jeff-Morgan

April 24, 2026
A group of students in costume pose together on a stage as a cast from a school play.

A Swamp-Tastic Show: McGuffey High School Stages Shrek the Musical

April 24, 2026
Man in a straw hat shades his eyes while looking into the distance outdoors.

A Salute to Farmers

April 24, 2026
The Case for Reassessment

The Case for Reassessment

April 24, 2026
Wilson Accounting Group Wilson Accounting Group Wilson Accounting Group

Archives

  • 2026
  • 2025
  • 2024
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • 2021
  • 2020
  • 2019
  • 2018

Recent Posts

  • Cool at School: Titanic Success at Jeff-Morgan
  • A Swamp-Tastic Show: McGuffey High School Stages Shrek the Musical
  • A Salute to Farmers

Categories

  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Business
  • Business Spotlight
  • Community
  • Cool at School
  • Crowded Kitchen
  • Education
  • Events
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Government
  • Health & Wellness
  • Hometown Heritage
  • Leisure
  • Local History
  • Local People
  • Opinion
  • Outdoors
  • Pets
  • Piece of My Mind
  • Public Service
  • Religion
  • Scene and Heard
  • Seasonal
  • Special Interest
  • Sports
  • Supernatural
  • Towne Square
  • Uncategorized

© 2025 GreeneScene Magazine - A Direct Results Company

No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • Contests
    • Where is This?
    • Person Place or Thing
    • trivia
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company

© 2025 GreeneScene Magazine - A Direct Results Company

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.