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“Life is beautiful not because of success or happiness, but because of passing tests. Here is my (main) chemotherapy path. When I realized that I would not escape, I calmed down and smiled”, Aušra Maldeikienė began his recording with Those words.
“In the first photo, I naively try to save my hair, so I am lying with a drop and a cooling helmet on my head. Morality: do not oppose nature. That helmet did not help.
Aušra Maldeikienė / Photo from social networks.
In the second photo, I desperately try to accept the fact that the hair no longer exists. And that photo showed me that it’s not so scary anymore, right?
Aušra Maldeikienė / Photo from social networks.
The third photo is the second aggressive “red” chemotherapy (after people got the name Bobelini). Chill out, when my son says. I am now calm forever.
Aušra Maldeikienė / Photo from social networks.
In the fourth photo, I am a lovely grandmother. Thank goodness for old age and way of life. I wish myself some more interesting things. Better, nicer, but everything fits.
Do not look. And if you are sick, seek joy in your heart. Hope is always there. Scratch and move on. “
Aušra Maldeikienė with her grandson / Photo from social networks.
People.lt recalls that in September 2019, Aušra Maldeikienė announced that she had been diagnosed with second stage breast cancer. At the time, she said that she had felt tired for a long time, almost a year. When doctors began looking for the reasons for this feeling, she was diagnosed with breast cancer and chemotherapy was started in early October.
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women in Lithuania. About one in nine women develops breast cancer in her lifetime. Breast cancer is most common in women over 50, but it sometimes affects younger people as well. Men also have breast cancer, but they rarely account for less than 1% of all breast cancers.
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