A Fulwood woman is set to hit the catwalk to celebrate overcoming breast cancer.
Bernadette Neville will be walking in a national fashion show for Breast Cancer Now to raise awareness and reflect on her own experience of the disease.
The event is set to be like no other as the 24 models taking to the catwalk are all living with or have had breast cancer.
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The models will be styled by top celebrity stylist Rebekah Roy.
68-year-old Bernadette was diagnosed with cancer in September 2022.
Retired wedding photographer Bernadette said: “I was showering when I felt a lump in my left breast in 2022, so I called the GP and got an appointment at the breast clinic within the week. But then my husband’s appendix burst and he needed surgery. That was a whirlwind week, so I wasn’t worried about my appointment at all. I’d been so preoccupied.
“It was a huge shock when I found out I had grade 3 breast cancer. I thought about my great-grandmother Lizzie who’d been diagnosed with breast cancer in the 1920s. She was 63 when she died. Luckily my breast cancer was treatable.
“There were tears of sadness in my husband and daughters’ eyes when I was diagnosed. I remember thinking, ‘I’m going to change my negative news into something positive. I am going to live to tell my story.
“So, over the next eight months, as I underwent a left mastectomy followed by chemotherapy and radiotherapy, I tried to keep doing positive things for myself like going to the gym, walking and eating well.
“Finally on 12 June 2023 I rang the bell that signalled the end of my treatment. Nothing can compare to the joy of that day and knowing that I would be OK and could carry on living life to the fullest.”
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in the UK, with around 55,000 women and 400 men diagnosed with the disease every year.
Eight out of 10 cases of breast cancer are diagnosed in women aged 50 and over.
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Bernadette said: “Of course, I found the process upsetting. I never thought I would lose a breast and it was a shock. But I remember after my surgery being dazed and taking off my gown for the first time, and my husband gave me a kiss and told me I was beautiful.
“It brings tears to my eyes to think about it now, because at the start of this journey I didn’t know if I’d see our golden wedding anniversary. Now, we’re thinking of booking a trip to Madeira to celebrate. It reminds me how lucky I am and how far medicine has developed and is still developing thanks to the work of organisations like Breast Cancer Now.
“I asked my oncologist what treatment my great-grandmother Lizzie would have had in the 1920s and he said it would have only been tablets. It made me more passionate about raising awareness of breast cancer research to help future generations, and also to raise awareness for everyone to keep checking their boobs!
“This is why I decided to walk in The Show, and to show that there is a life after breast cancer. My husband and my daughters will be coming along to watch me take part in The Show by Breast Cancer Now. I have never done anything like it before, it’s way out of my comfort zone but I’m so excited to take to the catwalk!”
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