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Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 10 Jul 2014, p. 1

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905877-6944 33 Mountainview Rd. North, Georgetown EMPLOYEE PRICING EVENT FINANCING AND LEASING AVAILABLE ON SELECT MODELS • your window & door professionals • 341 Guelph St., Unit 3 Georgetown 905.873.0236 www.buy-wise.ca info@buy-wise.ca • awarded readers choice 22 times • Visit our showroom hairlounge.com Thursday, July 10, 2014 Halton Hills' award-winning newspaper serving Acton & Georgetown 64 Pages 50 Cents (+HST) Visit us at www.theifp.ca INSIDE Bulldogs face Gaels, again Pg. 26 A close call on the tracks Pg. 3 Wheels 8 page section Will you Rock the Hills? Online at www.theifp.ca Three-time cancer survivor remains positive with a desire to give back Those who've met Georgetown moth- er Tammy Snow would describe her as a woman who's cheerful and full of life. The vibrant 44-year-old is the picture of health-- the last person one would imagine surviving cancer not once, not twice, but three times. While it may sound unbelievable, that's just what Snow has done over the past eight years, all the while holding onto her famous positive attitude. "It's almost like she's the poster child for surviving cancer," said best friend Karen Evely, who's teaming up with Snow to take part in the Weekend to End Women's Cancers this fall. "Her whole attitude towards life and being a survivor three times is amazing. She teaches you that it doesn't matter what happens in your life-- you are liv- ing." Dodging the proverbial bullet three times can seem even a bit surreal to Snow herself, who could've never imag- ined the journey she was embarking on after discovering a lump in her breast in 2007. "My breast was itchy, and when I touched it I could feel a little bump," she recalled. "At the time, I didn't think any- thing else of it." A couple weeks later while on vaca- tion, she discovered that the bump had grown to the size of a pea. When she returned home her doctor sent for an ultrasound and mammogram, followed by a biopsy. On June 6, 2007, she received the results that would change her life forever. "The doctor said, 'You have breast cancer,' and I just went numb," she said. "I had a 12-year-old son. I was single. I had a lot to live for. I was going to live for him, and I was going to live for me." She said it was several weeks before she was able to tell her son the news as she wanted to summon the strength to have a positive attitude. "I wanted to make sure when I spoke to him I was comfortable with it," she said. "I looked at him and said, 'Listen son, I'm going to be here to nag you for the rest of your life.'" Snow made her way to the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre in Toronto, where she underwent eight rounds of chemotherapy, had a lobectomy - where they remove a portion of the breast - and 30 rounds of radiation to clear her body of the fast-growing, aggressive cancer. The treatments were a success. Proudly wearing the invisible badge of a cancer survivor, Snow said she wanted to give back to the hospital that had given her another chance at life. It was then that she signed up for her fi rst Shoppers Drug Mart Weekend to End Women's Cancers, a two-day, 60-kilo- metre fundraiser walk through the streets of Toronto that benefi ts the Campbell Family Cancer Research Institute at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre. See CANCER, pg. 8 By MELANIE HENNESSEY Special to the IFP Three-time cancer survivor grown to the size of a pea. When she returned home her doctor sent for an ultrasound and mammogram, followed by She said it was several weeks before she was able to tell her son the news as she wanted to summon the strength to have a positive TAMMY SNOW Photo by Melanie Hennessey Are you Home Safe Home? See Home Lawn & Garden, 8 pages inside

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