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Home > Patient Stories > Cancer 


Laughing Through the Tears - Annie Bach's Story

Healthy People magazine readers may remember Annie Bach as the skydiving daredevil who celebrated her cancer survival by jumping out of a plane. Her experience was captured on the magazine's October 1995 cover.

Annie was diagnosed with breast cancer Nov. 9, 1994. More than 10 years later, she remembers the details of that day vividly: waiting for her husband to come home from work, seeing her three children off to bed, thinking and worrying.

“At 37, it was such as shock. Anyone I had known who experienced breast cancer was much older. When I think back on it, it was an unknown at that time. Breast cancer wasn’t as out (in the public) as at is now. It kind of derailed me,” Annie says.

After a mastectomy and four rounds of chemotherapy, Annie was deemed cancer-free in March 1995. Since then, her sister has also survived a bout with breast cancer. With the exception of lymphedema (swelling of the arms after a mastectomy) Annie says she feels great.

“I was always the kind of person who stopped to smell the roses anyway, but you really learn how precious life is and not to take anything for granted when you are diagnosed with cancer,” she says.

Annie would love to go skydiving again and is contemplating another jump. For now she stays grounded, doing newborn hearing screenings at St. John’s Hospital in Springfield and volunteer work with cancer organizations. She was named volunteer of the year in 1999 for the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation and has served as a counselor for the American Cancer Society’s Reach to Recovery program.

On the fifth anniversary of her clean bill of health, Annie bought herself a pink-ribbon necklace from the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.

“You always worry that it might come back,” she says. “But I’m diligent about my health and I get regular mammograms.”

Friends and family helped her cope and now help her celebrate the milestones. During a breast cancer awareness month event one October, she delivered a cake to Alice 95.5 disc jockey Kevin Howard. It was shaped like a woman’s torso wearing a bikini top.

“I’m all about having a sense of humor,” she says. “You have to learn to laugh through the tears.”
 

A member of the
Sisters of Mercy Health System