when she was 32, cindy howard was like most people at that age, thinking she was young and in great health. she had solid lifestyle habits, committing to regular exercise workouts and eating well with her husband mike and four-year-old son mason. she also worked in healthcare as a nurse for a private patient support program that helps people navigate their treatment.
but her life took a dramatic turn. she just got back to her winnipeg home from a work trip to toronto where she had felt an odd heaviness in her vagina, almost as if she was wearing a tampon. now back home, she did a self-exam in the shower and felt a hard fixed mass on her cervix.
“i screamed, i almost passed out. my husband ran in and asked what was wrong, and i told him, ‘something is really, really wrong.’ and he knew by the look on my face that i almost knew in that moment that it was cancer,” says howard. she went to urgent care where she got a referral to see a gynecologist the next day.
what followed was an emotional rollercoaster of being told the mass could be benign – an abnormal but noncancerous collection of cells – but then hearing results that kept getting worse and worse. the gynecologist ordered a biopsy and an urgent mri where the radiologist said that the mass was well encapsulated, showing no signs of spreading anywhere, and likely benign. the biopsy, though, confirmed the tumour was invasive squamous cell carcinoma, cervical cancer.