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Heegaard puts bout with cancer behind her

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A 5-year-old’s view of the world is insular. Janae only understood cancer because it was happening to her. The consequences of a life-threatening illness didn’t completely sink in.

“When a kid has cancer, it’s so different from what you and I know in this world today,” Suzanne said. “We know that adults, even after they have their chemo and they’re feeling well, they still have this mental, like battle, of ‘Oh, I have cancer, I’m going to die.’ Kids, when they’re not feeling nauseous, or when their white blood cell count is not at zero and they still have energy, life’s 100 percent great.”

While she didn’t sink into depression, the normally boisterous child became subdued. Her smile became forced. In pictures it’s easy to see the exhaustion behind her sunken, brown eyes. Her already-skinny body became little more than skin wrapped around her tiny bones, and her hair steadily fell out in clumps.

“She was so sick and she got so thin,” said Ellyn, her 17-year-old sister. “She was just a lot less active – maybe still active for a kid her age, but a lot less active than she had been.”

•••

Suzanne couldn’t react in time to catch Janae, who fell flat on her face in the middle of the hallway at Children’s Memorial Hospital on a visit in early 2009.

Janae had crawled around the house throughout the previous few days, but Suzanne and Frank assumed Janae was being her normal, goofy self.

But on the way to Dr. Elaine Morgan’s office, Janae stumbled over and over again. Suzanne mentioned the tripping to Morgan, and the oncologist asked for more information.

Chemotherapy had overwhelmed Janae’s little body, and the nerves in her foot were damaged by neuropathy. Because Janae was so young, she’d eventually recover 94 to 96 percent of the feeling in her feet.

But Morgan tempered their expectations.

“I will definitely tell you she’s not going to be an Olympic athlete, like a runner or a ballerina,” Suzanne remembers the doctor saying.

•••

Frank looked out the window on a summer day in 2009 to see Janae playing tag with her friends. Chemotherapy had been over for a few months, and her signature smile was returning.


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