

This is a story about Shirley鈥攁 wife and mother who loves making the most of life and spending time with her family and friends. Her cancer diagnosis caught her off guard, but she didn鈥檛 let it control her life.
Shirley was a relatively healthy person, but suddenly she found herself dealing with unusual headaches. After a visit to the emergency room and undergoing a CT scan, the news was stunning: There were lesions on her brain. Further diagnostics revealed that Shirley had lung cancer that had spread to her brain. 鈥淚 remember thinking, it鈥檚 not possible. I just hiked the weekend before for two hours, and I had a clean bill of health at my last physical,鈥� she recalls. But that was all in the past. It was time to focus on the present.
Looking for the right treatment plan led Shirley to the El Camino Hospital Cancer Center. In her husband Bob and sister Kelly鈥檚 research, they found El Camino Hospital to be the only one in the area willing to share success rates of cancer treatments. Shirley found that level of honesty and transparency to be reassuring. The usual course of treatment for the metastatic cancer in her brain was whole brain radiation. While potentially effective, it also brought into play the possibility of early onset dementia. With the help of and , ultimately she decided on a combination of chemotherapy and CyberKnife radiation treatment which targeted the tumors with precision and spared her brain tissue.
Shirley鈥檚 treatments were effective, exceeding the expectations of her doctor. She remembers the day when her oncologist told her that 鈥渁 miraculous event had occurred.鈥� Buoyed by the support of her family and friends, Shirley was in remission. She returns to the Cancer Center every few weeks for maintenance chemo, but it doesn鈥檛 feel like treatment for cancer. 鈥淚 tell my friends it鈥檚 time for my spa day,鈥� she says with delight. Shirley can鈥檛 say enough good things about the nurses and staff at the Cancer Center. Without fail, they always make her feel welcome and treat her with the warmth and compassion usually reserved for good friends.
When asked what she would say to others in a similar situation, Shirley is an advocate for El Camino Hospital. 鈥淲ithout the treatment I鈥檝e received at El Camino Hospital, I don鈥檛 think I鈥檇 be where I am today. Also, I just say, continue to live life. I鈥檝e been in recovery for many, many years, and I think a lot of my attitude comes from that. But as they say, continue to make lemonade out of lemons,鈥� Shirley says.
Shirley is doing just that. Whether it鈥檚 hiking outdoors or camping with Bob, going on shopping trips with her friends and daughter or spending some time alone doing yoga or Pilates, Shirley is embracing every moment of every day. 鈥淚 feel like I still have a long life to live. And El Camino Hospital has given me that long life to continue to live,鈥� she says with pride.