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Carol Stevens, One of Longest-Living Breast Cancer Survivors, Marks 90th Birthday on April 25

57-Year Breast Cancer Survivor Diagnosed In 1957


Hollidaysburg PA – WEBWIRE
Carol Stevens rides elephant named Danny while on safari in Africa.
Carol Stevens rides elephant named Danny while on safari in Africa.

“You get up every morning and count your blessings. I have something on my computer that says, ‘There is a reason God limits our days: to make each one precious.’ And that’s what I do.”

Carol Stevens is celebrating two important milestones – her 90th birthday on Friday, April 25 and her 57th year as a breast cancer survivor. She is believed to be one of the longest-living breast cancer survivors in the U.S.

She is the mother of Annie Stevens, founder of ClearRock Inc., a Boston-based executive coaching, outplacement and leadership development firm.
 
Carol, a resident of Hollidaysburg, Pa., may share that distinction with Jeannette Bey, 92, of Holmen, Wisconsin, who has also survived breast cancer for 57 years. Determining the official designation is difficult because statistics on cancer survivors go back to only 1973, according to the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) Program of the National Cancer Institute. Both women were diagnosed in 1957.
 
Carol’s story was recently profiled by the American Cancer Society’s Stories of Hope and Jeannette’s story was told in a 2010 article in The La Crosse Tribune. The women are planning to speak before Carol celebrates her 90th birthday.
 
Carol’s survival story began with her cancer diagnosis at the age of 33. A mother of four children, she traveled from her Hollidaysburg home to see a specialist in New York with her oldest daughter, Brooks, 8, because she was concerned that the child had a brain tumor.
 
Several months before that trip, Carol had discovered a lump on her breast, but her local doctor diagnosed it as a result of nursing her youngest daughter, Annie, who was born a year earlier. While at the hospital with Brooks, Carol decided to get tested, too. The test results showed that Brooks did not have a tumor, but Carol did.
 
Carol was rushed into surgery and had a radical mastectomy – which was the standard surgical procedure at the time before cancer treatment progressed – and her ovaries were removed. While Carol and Brooks were in New York, John Stevens, Carol’s husband, taught their one-year-old daughter Annie to walk, and she greeted them at the door when they arrived home.
 
Doctors originally gave Carol only five years to live – and she has surpassed that by more than half a century.
 
There was no chemotherapy or radiation treatment back then, but her doctor gave her some advice that she has followed to the letter ever since. “I was told when I got home not to get tired, hire a baby sitter every week and go on a date with my husband. The doctor also told me to put my feet up for 10 minutes a day,” Carol recalls.
 
John Stevens, a geologist and avid outdoorsman who worked on the Alaska pipeline, died in 2007. Carol still puts her feet up for 10 minutes every day.
 
She also followed her doctor’s advice to keep active. After raising their children, she received a master’s degree in education from Penn State while in her 40s and became a remedial reading specialist. She became an administrator and supervisor of language arts in the Hollidaysburg and Altoona area school systems, pushing for reading and writing programs across the districts. She retired at age 69 and consulted in language arts, spoke at conferences and assembled reading workshops until she was 72.
 
But she wasn’t finished with her adventures. After John died, Carol traveled the world with Annie – going on safari in Africa, taking a Zodiac around icebergs in Alaska, canoeing in white water, hiking and camping. She fulfilled one of her lifelong dreams at age 83 when she rode an elephant named Danny in Africa. She and Annie are heading to the Amazon next in November on a National Geographic tour.
 
The grandmother of one and a great grandmother of two, Carol is now getting ready to mark her 90th birthday with a party in Hollidaysburg on April 25 that will be attended by 53 friends from all over the country and her children: Annie, 57; Brad Stevens, 59; Brooks Stamm, 64; and John Stevens, 67, and their spouses.
 
Reflecting on her life of achievement, Carol states, “You get up every morning and count your blessings. I have something on my computer that says, ‘There is a reason God limits our days: to make each one precious.’ And that’s what I do.”
 
Daughter Annie attests to her mother’s optimism. “She’s a survivor. She has survived breast cancer after being told she would die in five years. I’m certain this has infused her life-living attitude.”


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 breast cancer survivor
 cancer survivor
 outplacement
 executive coaching
 career transition


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