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Heegaard puts bout with cancer behind her

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A sharp pain ran along her right side, and her father, Frank, rushed to her side.

“I felt like something just bursted or popped,” Janae said later. “I was thinking, ‘Ow, this really hurt.’ “

After Frank gave her a snack and a glass of water, he eased her back to sleep. But minutes later, the screams started again.

Suzanne, Janae’s mother, was almost certain Janae had come down with appendicitis, so she took her to Delnor Hospital. They were sent away on their first trip, with Janae showing no signs of appendicitis, but a mother’s instinct told Suzanne to return.

Twenty or thirty minutes after Janae received a CT scan, the doctor returned to the room.

“She has a malignant tumor,” Suzanne remembers the doctor saying.

“You mean, she has cancer?” Suzanne responded.

“Yes.”

Suzanne put her head in her hands and cried. Janae didn’t react, her eyes becoming heavy after a long day.

•••

Janae’s smile is almost constantly on her face. It’s the type of wide smile that, upon eye contact with another person, beckons a smile back. Her happy personality was as normal throughout her pre-cancer years as it is today.

“She’s really hyper, really fun, cares about people, and is compassionate,” her 16-year-old sister, Ruth, said.

The day before a surgeon would remove the tumor along with one of her kidneys, Janae lay with her head in her hands at the foot of her hospital bed, smiling and posing for a picture.

Janae knew the basics of cancer from what her mother had explained to her in the week since the tumor was discovered. But she didn’t grasp the entire situation. There she lay in that picture, smiling like a normal, happy five-year-old girl.

But the good feelings wouldn’t last long.

As she was wheeled into surgery the next day, her heart leapt, at the gravity and uncertainty of the situation finally caused butterflies in the pit of her stomach.

“I was just laying there, like, ‘What’s happening?’ “ Janae said. “I don’t think I understood that I could’ve died. I kind of understood, mom told me this a lot through it: ‘This is a big, scary thing, you could die.’ But I still didn’t understand that I could die from it.”


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