Current:Home > StocksWill Sage Astor-I've been fighting cancer for years. I know what's in store for Princess Kate. -VisionFunds
Will Sage Astor-I've been fighting cancer for years. I know what's in store for Princess Kate.
Indexbit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-06 13:11:03
I know that look on Will Sage AstorPrincess Kate’s face. Almost three years ago, I was her.
Sitting in front of a camera, alone and vulnerable after weeks of frenzied speculation, the Princess of Wales revealed in a video released Friday what has kept her out of the public eye: cancer.
I'm not a princess, of course. Not in the public eye. I'm a web editor for the Detroit Free Press, and I live a quiet life. But in the rarest, rawest way, as I watched her struggle to smile on my TV screen, I feel like I know what she's going through.
Because I also have cancer.
Princess Kate has cancer.The royal family created a scandal by bungling the story.
Prior to Friday's announcement, I was among those wondering what was going on with the woman married to the future king of England. I traded text messages with friends over the likelihood of Prince William's divorce scandal. I scrolled TikTok, captivated by the tinfoil conspiracies. I dissected the TMZ video of them shopping in Windsor, wondering if it was really her.
Learning of her cancer diagnosis was like throwing a bucket of cold water on it all.
A trauma cancer patients understand
As I heard the words, my heart dropped, and I was back in the moment my own diagnosis was revealed. May 4, 2021, a day that started out like any other.
I was 37 years old. Much like the 42-year-old princess, my cancer was discovered during a medical procedure, a routine laparoscopic surgery, intended to drain an ovarian cyst. I was at my doctor's office for what I thought was a routine check-in after surgery.
Instead, I learned that my doctor had found a tumor, and I heard my life-changing diagnosis: colon cancer. Within days, I learned it was stage 4. It had already spread to my liver and ovaries. Chemo would start immediately – and last indefinitely.
In so many ways, the wall-to-wall coverage of Kate's shocking diagnosis – Kensington Palace has not disclosed what kind of cancer she is facing – is triggering. As a patient myself, and particularly, as a mom.
Your friends and family members who have cancer may be feeling the same way. You might want to check on them. It’s hard to see others be hit by the same devastating disease and know what they’re about to go through in a way that others just can’t.
The loss of innocence, normalcy and the future that we once imagined – it’s a trauma that cancer patients understand.
Telling your child is the worst part
For me, those first days, weeks and even months after diagnosis were a blur. But I do remember the feelings of guilt for my daughter. The thoughts racing through my mind that she might have to live without me. But on the outside, trying to appear strong.
It was three days before I could muster the courage to tell my daughter, with my husband by my side, in the quiet living room of our home. She was 6.
We told her that mommy was sick, that I would need something called chemotherapy. It might make mommy feel yucky. She cried.
Quality of life matters:Do I have to get chemo to treat my cancer? That answer is changing as treatments evolve.
Since then, we have promised her – and held true to that promise – that we would answer any questions she might have, and that we would be honest with her.
As a mother, that could be the hardest part. Kate said in the video that it had taken time to tell Prince George, 10, Princess Charlotte, 8, and Prince Louis, 5. Did she have to share the news three times? Did she adjust her words for each of them, to accommodate their ages and levels of understanding?
A future defined by courage
When you have cancer, you can’t make promises, or possibly know how tough your battle will be.
I’m nearing my three-year cancerversary, and coming up on my 48th dose of chemotherapy. I’ve undergone several operations, from major abdominal surgery to minimally invasive ablations, and prayed with vigor awaiting the results of multiple CT, PET scans and MRIs, always hoping for the news that somehow we got it all – that for me, the fight is over.
To imagine anyone else enduring this is heartbreaking and unfathomable.
As she navigates the turbulent waters of treatment, Kate will undoubtedly face uncertainties of the future with grace and dignity, just as she has faced the challenges of royal life.
But beyond the palace walls, there’s a larger truth we can’t forget: Cancer doesn’t discriminate. It’s hard, and it’s every day – if you’re lucky – whether you’re a princess or a web editor from Macomb County.
So as the public rallies round her – and hopefully, the frenzy subsides – I hope we can focus on hope for a future free from cancer, where stories like Kate’s and mine aren’t defined by diagnosis, but by courage, resilience and an unyielding spirit to overcome.
Elissa Robinson is a web editor at the Detroit Free Press, where this column originally appeared.
veryGood! (44)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Buccaneers' first-round pick Calijah Kancey injures calf, could miss four weeks, per report
- MLB trade deadline's fantasy impact: Heavy on pitching, light on hitting
- 10 injured after stolen vehicle strikes pedestrians in New York City, police say
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- You Only Have 48 Hours to Shop These Ulta Deals: Olaplex, It Cosmetics, MAC, St. Tropez, and More
- Family of Henrietta Lacks settles HeLa cell lawsuit with biotech giant, lawyer says
- 'There's a code': Jets OC Nathaniel Hackett calls Sean Payton's criticism 'unfortunate'
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Why Keke Palmer Doesn't Want to Set Unrealistic Body Standards Amid Postpartum Journey
Ranking
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- China floods have left at least 20 dead
- Louisiana education officials note post-pandemic improvement in LEAP test scores
- Lizzo lawsuit: Singer sued by dancers for 'demoralizing' weight shaming, sexual harassment
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- FBI looks for more possible victims after woman escapes from cinderblock cage in Oregon
- American fugitive who faked his death can be extradited to Utah to face a rape charge, UK judge says
- Banking executive Jeffrey Schmid named president of Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank
Recommendation
Trump's 'stop
Movie extras worry they'll be replaced by AI. Hollywood is already doing body scans
1 dead, 9 injured after wrong-way vehicle crash on Maryland highway, police say
Pittsburgh synagogue massacre: Jury reaches verdict in death penalty phase
Could your smelly farts help science?
James Larkin, Arizona executive who faced charges of aiding prostitution, dead at 74
Minnesota trooper fatally shot man fleeing questioning for alleged restraining order violation
X marks the lawsuit: Elon Musk’s social media company sues nonprofit highlighting site’s hate speech