Showing posts with label Guest Writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Writer. Show all posts

Thursday, February 1, 2024

Us - in our neighbourhood magazine!

Well... honestly I'm not even sure where to start with this one. I've frequently reported how I tend to find myself in interesting situations at the most interesting times. Today is no different! And now Mike and I are "in it" together 😁 

We have landed on the cover of a magazine! We did submit ourselves to this - after several months of viewing non-local families being featured in our residential-neighbourhood magazine available in print and delivered to our mailbox monthly, we decided to put our voices to task and contribute to the local publication and share our family story to save the reading masses from random United States etc. family features from flooding our mail. 

Simply enough, we contacted the College Heights (Prince George suburb we live in and love) magazine publisher Best Version Media to submit our story for local interest coverage. Lo and behold, they said "Yes! Fill out this questionnaire and we'll feature you!" And here we are. 

Mike Allan and I wrote every word of this article together:

(I'm pretty sure this supports my BC Citizenship application!!)


Words cannot express how grateful I am for this incredible man with whom I now share my life - he is my dream come true, literally! Mike - amazing human, my partner, I love you. 💖 I am SO grateful we are on this crazy path together. Your openness in sharing your cancer journey - and your life journey - with me is something I cherish deeply, identify with, and will always protect and hold dear. 

***

There is no link to a digital version of this article, so you'll have to bear with us on reading the pdf version scanned from the paper magazine. We are still giggling (and snuffling) over this whole thing, and are grateful for the many people who responded to our call for extra copies so that we can share the print magazine with our kids and family members. Thank you College Heights community - this is what it's all about! 

Please also note - our sweet sphynx cat Archer has the centrefold of the magazine, Save Your Skin Foundation is our chosen feature charity, and there is an honourable mention for my long-time pal Reese, the eternal blog dog 🤎

SO much love xoxoxoxo



Friday, September 22, 2017

Countdown to Australia

Next month I will be attending the 9th World Congress of Melanoma in Brisbane, Australia, as the representative of Canadian patient advocacy group Save Your Skin Foundation.  This four-day congress serves as the meeting of world leaders in the field of skin cancer research, prevention, and treatment.  I will be attending sessions covering all of the latest news and topics in melanoma and other skin cancers, and I will bring this knowledge back to Canadian patients. 


https://worldmelanoma2017.com/

In conjunction with the congress, I have the honour of sitting on a working group in the Global Coalition for Melanoma Patient Advocacy, in which we will continue the work spearheaded by Melanoma Research Foundation (MRF).  I have followed MRF since my own diagnosis, and celebrated their work from my corner so far away; namely, this year in May was the first annual World Melanoma Day.


https://www.melanoma.org/get-involved/melanoma-awareness/certified-melanoma-educators

My itinerary for the week is pretty much booked.  In addition to the main plenary sessions discussing melanoma, I have chosen sessions which speak to my personal experience and interests, as well as those of Save Your Skin, as we want more detail in the following areas:
  • Advances in Merkel Cell Carcinoma (a rare but very serious form of cancer)
  • Basal Cell and Squamous Cell Carcinomas, Actinic Keratosis, and if I can, Uveal Melanoma (a.k.a Ocular Melanoma)
  • Surgical management of Stage III melanoma (directly relates to my scars)
  • Immuno-Oncology in melanoma
  • and one that I REALLY want to know about so I can put to rest the controversy - Sunscreen: Bioavailability and Toxicity (this topic was always on my mind in my tree-hugger days, and it is still a common question asked to SYSF)

My brain is going to be SO full!  I must admit, in the almost-year that I have been working for Save Your Skin, I have allowed myself to be intimidated at times, by the science and politics behind what the Foundation does, but as I buckle down and study it piece by piece, I realize I know far more than I thought.  My colleagues have been patiently teaching me, and I have been soaking up the information but now I find myself actually being able to apply the information to my own experience with melanoma, and it makes sense.  

I was there (still am, of course, my 6-month CT scans are Monday in fact) - I know what they're talking about, I have done my time at Sunnybrook and analyzed every word my medical team has told me over the years.  Now I get to learn from the best, about people just like me, and I understand. It is science - and I'm okay with that - thanks Kathy! ;-)

http://www.visitbrisbane.com.au/information/industry-toolbox/itineraries/pre-and-post-convention-touring?_ga=1.118741769.103720558.1475732778

Aside from the conference, I am taking a day to go hug a koala.  IN AUSTRALIA!!!!!          :-) :-) :-)   #spoiledgirl #gonnawearlongsleeves

 


 **************************************

22 days remain in my countdown to Australia, and I am reflecting on how this has all happened.  Three years ago at this time I was recovering from extensive surgery, my family and friends were looking after me, I was heading into my third systemic immunotherapy treatment, and I was in a psychological tailspin.  I had no idea whether or not I would survive to see any semblance of the future I had hoped I would have, and fear overtook most of my days.  

Step by step I walked out of that place, I worked to overcome those challenges, I leaned on the supportive people in my life, and I got back out there.  And I talked about it.... blah blah blah... you already know, I talked.  Blogs, youTube, radio, TV, magazines, speaking appearances, more blogs: it gave me something constructive to do with my cancer experience.  When I realized that there were others like myself, others navigating an advanced melanoma diagnosis with the same mysterious dark cloud over their future, I wanted to share.  I wanted to reach out and help them know they were not alone, and I wanted them to tell me it would be okay too.  Which they did. And still do.

Now I have the honour of being able to help others through their skin cancer journey on a grand scale.  I will go to Australia, attend the World Congress of Melanoma, fill my brain with all the latest news from the world leaders in this field, and bring it back to Canada in the form of reports from Save Your Skin Foundation.  Not bad for a humble little patient like me... as if I'm not already grateful enough just to be alive.  

Thank you Save Your Skin Foundation, for bringing out the best in me, and for encouraging me, now that I live permanently outside my old comfort zone.  Thank you for posting my first guest blog, it all started here:
 
http://saveyourskin.ca/one-melanoma-patients-need-for-community/

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Parenting Identical Twins - What I Have Learned About Nature vs. Nurture ~ HER MAGAZINE

Thanks to Her Magazine for the ongoing support of my parenting via writing, I have published another cute little piece about my observations and experiences in Motherhood.  

http://hermagazine.ca/parenting-identical-twins/


Thank you Her Magazine, was great to work with you! 


(update 30-March-2018: sadly, Her Magazine has been retired from the internet, so the links to my articles there no longer work.   Please see below for full original article I have pasted in today)

My other bylines on Her Mag: 

http://hermagazine.ca/parenting-advanced-melanoma/                 http://hermagazine.ca/school-lunches-pack/

https://www.huffingtonpost.ca/her-magazine/skin-cancer_b_10004502.html

http://hermagazine.ca/school-lunches-pack/ 


Parenting Identical Twins: My Lesson in 'Nature vs. Nurture'
Natalie Richardson, October 19, 2016 ~Her Magazine

Fifteen years ago I was sure I had it all figured out.  Contentedly reclined in my fluffy new double-wide chair, classical music playing softly beside my tummy, I worked my way through a pile of parenting books, preparing for the baby twins I would soon have. Sometimes I even read out loud, in the most maternal voice I could imagine for myself.
  
As a first-time mother, I perceived that I had an innate understanding of the Nature vs. Nurture theory, and I was going to Nurture my babies until the cows came home. The Nature vs. Nurture debate is a centuries-old discussion in psychology which addresses human behavioural traits as being directly impacted by influences genetically inherited versus by environmental imprint.
In other words, there is debate over how a human baby grows into an adult with unique characteristics and personality traits: is it as a result of their hereditary family make-up?  Or is it because they were raised that way by their family and surroundings?  

I was pretty sure that my strict upbringing and well-travelled childhood experiences had sculpted my diverse psyche and moral temperament.  I had every intention of parenting our twins with down to earth methods and old-fashioned logic.  They would not watch much television, they would eat their vegetables, they would learn to read before they were given a gaming console, and they would look people in the eye when they spoke to them.  
 
My daughters were born identical twins, with a late split in utero landing them in the same sac and with a shared placenta.  These babes couldn’t possibly BE any closer in DNA, short of being conjoined.  Their environment was identical also.  They looked alike, they had the same sleep and eat patterns, they learned to talk, walk, and potty within days of each other.  They were very good babies, calm yet curious, with bright intelligent eyes that observed everything.

My whole “Nurture” plan was working well: they thrived on routine and knew what to expect in most situations.  They knew their colours and farm animal sounds, they loved finger painting and their Baba’s blueberry perogies.  They grew into toddlers who loved all people and animals.  They were a matched set, adorable girls so identical they would forever confuse their grandparents as to which was which.
 
And then… subtle differences in characteristics began to appear… one ate more slowly than the other, one was very bold at the zoo, one would cover her ears when people sang Happy Birthday, one favoured her left hand for colouring. Their natural differences began to sprout out of our very nurturing environment.  It was interesting to watch these developments happen.  But I was also puzzled.  
 
These girls had done everything together since day one.  They had precisely the same hours of sleep and play, they were always together when family visited, they usually even had the same number of peas on their plates at dinner time!  They slept in the same crib and then bedroom, listened to the same songs, were scolded in the same manner – it wasn’t intentional, it was just typical, as they were always in the same phase at the same time. 
 
I am a bit surprised at how different they are when they have been exposed to the same environment all their lives.  The good and the bad: same classrooms throughout elementary school, same divorce and family visiting schedule, same small town hobbies and teams.  They were a perfect experiment in Nature vs. Nurture, had I wanted that.   
 
I had put full stock in Nurturing them to the best of my ability, but I was learning that their own Natures might come out on top.  One is inventive and one is artistic – they had each had the same number of crayons all their lives – how did this happen!? 
 
Don’t get me wrong, I don’t mind at all – of course I was not trying to raise clones.  I just wasn’t of the mind that they needed to be separated very much, there would be plenty of time for that later in life. 


 They don’t struggle with any of these issues at all, they love being identical twins.  They still sometimes buy matching clothing so they can “be twins,” and they frequently change their hairstyles (and colours) to distinguish themselves or to go back to matching. 
 
My teenagers are each other’s best friends, sharing many similarities but also taking their differences in stride.  One is a sassy left-handed night-owl, while the other is a determined young lady with a regimented focus on her future.
 
What have I learned about Nature vs. Nurture?  That there is solid reason for it having been such a long-lived debate.  
 
I cannot determine how or why my children are turning out the way they are, but I put everything I have into exposing them to a good environment.  Thankfully their gene pools are pretty solid as well, so maybe both theories get equal credit in this house?



Friday, October 28, 2016

WHY Save Your Skin Foundation? ~ Guest Blogger, me

Lots in the works in my neighbourhood these days, so exciting!  Feels like really LIVING.  

This is where is all began for me.... 
Please click here to check out this blog post I wrote in honour of my joining the Save Your Skin Foundation team:

http://www.saveyourskin.ca/blog/why-save-your-skin-foundation/

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Column - Meaford Express - Simcoe.com Oct. 2016 - Work after a cancer diagnosis

This subject has been forefront on my mind during recovery from cancer surgeries and treatments, though I have not discussed it publicly.  Until now.  

It is a difficult topic for many folks dealing with a life-interrupting illness: what to do about work?  How to maintain or regain a sense of purpose? How to deal with the stigma of being away?  How to get back in.... and how to be true to yourself, your family, and your "new normal."

Please click here to read my column:

http://www.simcoe.com/opinion-story/6900112-work-after-a-cancer-diagnosis/


17-Oct-2016 ~ Added note: 

I received a helpful email from my Aunt, suggesting I add a bit more information to this article.  Although I can't add it to the published version on simcoe.com, I can add it here.  
What she says is true, and more can be found elsewhere online or with one's personal employer in such a situation, and I was indeed offered these alternatives at my place of employ (thank you Bill's valu-mart).  If you find yourself in a health crisis such as mine, please consider the following: 

You might want to include something on the legal right to accommodation:  the employer's duty to accommodate – short of undue hardship. While individual choices are important – and the accommodation requirement must be individualized – I think that many people do not know that they also have legal rights, for example, that a gradual return to work, or shorter hours, or other accommodations aren't just at the preference or 'good intentions' of their employer or union.  (Of course, the employee must also be willing to 'accommodate' and seek solutions.)

Click image:
http://www.chrc-ccdp.ca/sites/default/files/gmrw_ggrt_en_2.pdf

Or visit http://www.ohrc.on.ca/en for more information re: Ontario 

Thank you Auntie C! 


Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Column - Meaford Express - Simcoe.com August 2016 - Meaford Through My Lens

Last week my little contribution to the Meaford Express Columns section was more about the Melanoma Through My Lens Reflection Project.  I was able to take a moment to parallel my exploration of this town, and melanoma journey, through the lens of a camera.  

This column was just published online today, so here is the link... and a photo of the paper copy.  It's about all I have time to do anyway LOL what with the girls starting high school this week (in Owen Sound) (-and not yet registered by the Board for a bus route! so Yours Truly still gets to play Mom's Taxi) as well as my prep for a busy weekend of Mudmoiselle guests and fun, this week is a bust and we're not even halfway through.  

Thanks, as always, for reading. :-) 

http://www.simcoe.com/opinion-story/6842490-meaford-through-my-lens/


August 31, 2016:


Thursday, August 11, 2016

Column - Meaford Express - Simcoe.com August 2016

July disappeared in a flash around here... August provides me with a new opportunity to write write write... beginning with the Meaford Express column.

Please click here to read my thoughts about this summer's exorbitant heat and sun.  Thank you for clicks and shares!

http://www.simcoe.com/opinion-story/6801757-the-summer-of-sun-in-meaford/




Monday, July 11, 2016

New Dermatologist

So..... I have mentioned before my somewhat chilly relationship with the Skin Doctor in my life... (comes with the territory of an ex-sun-baby melanoma patient I suppose) ...to the point of us CO-FIRING each other.  
My lovely Family Doc saved me yet again - I met my new Dermatologist today - right here in Meaford! 

A quick in - and - out in Ambulatory Care with a Derm on a once-monthly visit to Meaford Hospital determined me all-clear of any worrisome skin lesions. Yay that's a great first step!  We had a quick chat about my history, and of my future, of CT scans for monitoring post-clinical-trial, and we agreed to see each other again in six months.  

Sadly, come 2017, after a 15-year stint of monthly trips to Meaford, my new Dermatologist will be seeing patients in the Big Smoke only, so.... I will go see her there!  With my stage of melanoma I have as much chance of having a new melanoma on my skin as I did two (or twenty) years ago; a stage three diagnosis is more likely to re-appear internally than on the surface. But I digress...

I offered her a gift in thanks for checking in on us rural patients, by form of my article in Escarpment Magazine this month.   I explained that I am an aspiring Writer exploring the platform of a topic very dear to me, that of melanoma education and awareness advocacy.  

I flipped to the article in question and to my surprise she said "That's YOU?  Just this weekend we were talking about this article!"  She went on to say how she thought it was great that someone would take the time to write about and share this topic, and we briefly discussed the importance of changing the conversation regarding skin health and tanning etc.  I told her about how I have been sharing my story in the name of trying to help others to avoid a fate such as mine... Save The Skin You're In

In my new Dermatologists name I have decided to summarize my advocacy work in one post (to date), and for any new readers, Thank You.  Please feel free to click and share away.....

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/natalie-richardson/metastatic-melanoma-diagnosis_b_9636748.html


  
http://hermagazine.ca/parenting-advanced-melanoma/


http://www.simcoe.com/news-story/6481667-meaford-resident-helping-raise-awareness-of-the-dangers-of-skin-cancer/





http://rogerstv.com/media?lid=237&rid=23&gid=250670 

http://www.saveyourskin.ca/blog/toronto-blue-jays-take-on-notjustskincancer/


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14E_EfUVGRk&feature=youtu.be


https://natalierichardson.journoportfolio.com/


http://www.onewalk.ca/site/TR?px=1378052&fr_id=1070&pg=personal



https://ca.style.yahoo.com/post/144156373210/open-letter-why-no-tan-is-a-good-tan 


http://toronto.ctvnews.ca/video?playlistId=1.2884516




http://www.escarpmentmagazine.ca/flipzine/2016-summer/#116

 





https://impatientpatientmomma.blogspot.ca/2016/06/mudmoiselle-beaver-valley.html





Monday, July 4, 2016

Toronto Blue Jays take on #NotJustSkinCancer

I am still glowing from our experience in Toronto on Saturday.  

Honoured to say:  I was able to represent Save Your Skin Foundation at the Blue Jays game on July 2, 2016, when the participants in the #NotJustSkinCancer video and team were invited to a luxurious ball park afternoon in the Community Clubhouse Suite, courtesy of Jays Care Foundation.  
I was even able to take my family, so the girls and I met my Mom and Grant at the SkyDome (oops sorry Rogers Centre) for a memorable afternoon together, along with the folks from Melanoma Network of Canada.  We have never done anything like that before!  It was AWESOME.

Please click here to read the full scoops and see some photos:


Thank you Save Your Skin Foundation for the opportunity to share my story, and thank you to Roche Canada for sharing the #NotJustSkinCancer concept, thanks to the fabulous PR team who have facilitated the whole thing, and of course thank you to the Jays Care Foundation for the day on Saturday!  













http://web.mlbcommunity.org/index.jsp?content=programs&program=play_sun_smart




Sunday, July 3, 2016

Escarpment Magazine - Guest Writer, me!


I was thrilled when Escarpment Magazine asked me to write an article for their Summer 2016 issue; about the importance of sun safety and skin health, based on my experience with stage three melanoma.  

An elegant and informative local publication that I have admired for years, Escarpment Magazine covers a collection of local home/garden design, recreation, fashion, real estate, health/wellness, and foodie finds that delight all audiences.  They cover everything in local sporting life such as bicycling, hiking,  and skiing, as well as fashion layouts featuring local models in clothing from shops all across Bruce, Grey, and Simcoe counties.  

Luxurious yet accessible, and 100% LOCAL.  I love it!! 

http://www.escarpmentmagazine.ca/

It is available in our area on stands in grocery stores, news outlets, and at several of their advertisers places of business, as well as subscription by mail.  (In fact I bought a subscription for my Mom so that all year round she can appreciate Georgian Bay Living from her Sarnia and Florida homes) 

It is also available online free of charge.  Please click here to see the article I wrote:



http://www.escarpmentmagazine.ca/flipzine/2016-summer/#116

http://www.escarpmentmagazine.ca/flipzine/2016-summer/#118


Thank you Haily, Clay, and everyone at Escarpment Magazine for inviting me to share in your Summer 2016 issue.  I am honoured, as a writer, and as a melanoma survivor.  

Congrats also to Clay and Cara for their upcoming promotions based on Deena's semi-retirement... I smiled ear to ear when I read that in her Editor's Note!  :-)