Stories of Hope
Priscilla Dewey Houghton, New York
Diagnosed in 1987 at age 64
Nonsmall cell lung cancer
“We don't know what it is that makes us the lucky ones, or what makes
that little cell go out of whack for the first time, and maybe again. But we
DO know there is help, there is treatment, there is recovery -- there is LIFE.” |
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Priscilla Dewey Houghton is an eleven-year survivor of
non-small cell lung cancer. In addition to her work as playwright, lyricist
and writer, Priscilla is married to Congressman Amo Houghton (R-NY, 31st Dist.),
who represents the "Southern Tier" of New York State -- near Corning.
Rep. Houghton is one of a handful of legislators working to gain more national
attention for lung cancer issues. He mentions this on his correspondence and
gathers co-sponsors for a congressional hearing. Let your Representatives know
it's time! Here's how!
My lung cancer had always been a well-kept secret. My "therapy" was
working with Hospice and other friends facing this grim diagnosis... I was
one of the lucky ones, still alive, leading a full and productive life, working
hard, riding a bike ten miles every day, drinking gallons of tea...
When I was diagnosed with lung cancer in 1987, my kids and I were still recovering
from losing the battle of my husband, their father, four years earlier to renal
cell cancer. He was 55 when diagnosed 58 when he died. This courageous man
loved every day he lived, even with extreme pain, five major operations and
paralysis during the two and a half years between his diagnosis and his death.
It was a privilege to take care of him. He fought to survive every day of the
way... So, four years later, when my chest x-ray showed a lesion and our lung
surgeon snapped the CT scan onto the light frame, my daughter and I were professionals
in the language of cancer. We shrank from that all-too-familiar enemy when
he said, "there's the tumor." When I left my daughter at her house,
to drive home, she said through her tears, "piece of cake, Mom." We
both knew what that piece of cake would be like.

Priscilla Dewey Houghton and her husband, Rep. Amo Houghton of New York's 3rd
District.
I knew the hypothetical odds. After I had a lobectomy, the odds changed...a
huge shot at life. There was one thing I knew: I had to get back on my bicycle
if I wanted to get better... My adult children walked beside my bike as I inched
along for the first time, in a generation reversal... Maybe it's a fantasy,
but I KNOW my ten-mile daily bike ride keeps my lungs, my legs, and my head
working to their maximum potential. The adrenaline pumps, the antibodies charge,
the spirit soars.
We don't know what it is that makes us the lucky ones, or what makes that
little cell go out of whack for the first time, and maybe again. But we DO
know there is help, there is treatment, there is recovery -- there is LIFE.