Survivor
first and cyclist second, Lance Armstrong
takes on cancer.
By
Kathy LaTour
Lance Armstrong’s legend was born in the mountains—the
French Alps with names like Hautacam and La Plagne, where he was
known to train until he “knew” the slope and felt confident
in its twists and turns. Such precision and determination resulted
in seven consecutive wins of the Tour de France, where he was always
followed by desperate competitors trying to catch him.
And all this
after surviving testicular cancer that spread to his brain.
Now,
newly retired from cycling, 35-year-old Armstrong has set his sights
on a new mountain—or hill, if you will, Capitol Hill, where his challengers
are no longer behind him but rather in front. He is far from alone in his quest;
indeed, as he is now followed by an army—the LIVESTRONG army that wears
the ubiquitous yellow wristbands. They aren’t trying to overtake their
leader but instead have made clear that they will follow him anywhere to fight
the battle all of them know too well: cancer.
A new understanding has begun to
take shape that the weapon of choice for this army is not the sword,
because each of those yellow bands—now at 55 million
and increasing—carries with it not only awareness but something much more
powerful—a vote.
“Capitol Hill is a much bigger mountain than I’ve ever
climbed,”Armstrong says. “And the mission is bigger
than any seven Tours. If every cancer survivor in this country said, ‘That’s
it. I am going to use my vote for or against you,’ it would
be the most powerful voting block in the country. It would be overwhelming
what kind of change could happen.”
That’s not a threat against one party because it’s
an “apolitical narrative presented on behalf of the entire
population,” he says. But Armstrong is clear it will be the
new challenge of his life.
“I am retired and need a new, bigger focus outside my life besides sports,
and it’s cancer. I am not going away.” For the man who has never
failed, it’s an ambitious endeavor, but keep in mind that Armstrong’s
greatest talent is outlasting his opponents.
Climbing
the Hill
The first shot in the newest battle in the war
on cancer was fired in February when President George W. Bush issued
his proposed budget for fiscal year 2007. The $2.77 trillion budget
included more than $28 billion for the National Institutes of Health,
the same it received the previous year. After adjusting for medical
inflation, the NIH would actually receive about $1 billion less
than the prior year. And, of cuts to 18 of 19 institutes under
the NIH, the largest cut is to the National Cancer Institute—a
$39.7 million decrease from 2006 funding and $74 million less
than 2005.
Not acceptable, says Armstrong, who put out the battle
cry to the legion of LIVESTRONG members to call and write their
elected officials. “Since
Nixon declared the war on cancer in 1971, if you add up all the
money the federal government has spent from that point until today—35
years’ worth—it adds up to basically seven months in
Iraq,” he says.
Whether it was the calls or other pressure,
the Senate Appropriations Committee voted to reinstate the funds.
But the battle was only half won, as the House Appropriations Committee
passed a proposal that carries forward the NCI funding cut. The
full House and Senate are expected to vote on the bill after the
November elections.
On May 17, Armstrong personally took his army
to Capitol Hill for LIVESTRONG Day to continue the pressure. “It’s
time to fight back,” Armstrong says. “It’s a significant
time for research with advances in the human genome and proteomics.
It’s a great time to do one thing right, and that is to increase
funding.”
Without training commitments in Europe, Armstrong
was “on
the ground” as he called it, for the first time for LIVESTRONG
Day 2006, there to meet the advocates and ready them for battle.
The advocates, two from each state, spent the first day in meetings
that could have been titled Advocacy 101, where they learned the
ways of Capitol Hill and tricks to get their elected officials to
listen to them. The night before their attack, they heard from their
leader about the importance of the mission. “The war on cancer
has gotten old in the hearts and minds of people,” Armstrong
said, adding, “It’s our job to get cancer back on the
government’s radar.”
Another area Armstrong hammers
home is the number of preventable deaths from cancer through early
detection and better screening. “Of
the almost 600,000 cancer deaths a year, 200,000 were preventable,” he
told the crowd. “We have the technology to cure a lot of people
right now but it’s not happening. This is the easy stuff and
we should fix it first.”
Like any good commander-in-chief,
Armstrong is backed by substantial organizational and tactical ability
from the 60-person staff of the Lance Armstrong Foundation. LAF
president and chief executive officer Mitch Stoller says the momentum
Armstrong has begun won’t
stop until people listen. “Two years ago we had 11 people
on the Hill and last year it was 50,” says Stoller. “This
year it’s 100 and next year our aim is 435 advocates, one
for each Congressional district.”
In addition, Armstrong enlisted
the support of a number of politicians, most notably John Kerry,
who Armstrong attributes with the phenomenal success of the yellow
bracelet, which Kerry wore during his run for the presidency in
2004, causing a buying frenzy that has now topped 55 million at
$1 a bracelet. Kerry related to the gathered advocates that it was
a cancer survivor in an Iowa field who first gave him the bracelet
when he learned of Kerry’s own diagnosis
of prostate cancer. Kerry quoted the man, saying, “Here, wear
this, because it’s important that other people know you can
survive and go on and do things.”
“And I am going to keep it on until we have a cure for cancer,” Kerry
told the assembled advocates. Indeed, while the LIVE-STRONG advocates
called on their elected officials, Armstrong met with Congressmen
Steny Hoyer, a Maryland Democrat, and Roger Wicker, a Mississippi
Republican, both of whom are co-sponsors of a bill related to cancer
and quality-of-life issues.
At the day’s closing media event,
Armstrong stood in front of the yellow-shirted advocates. “I
have been in Washington for two days,” he told the assembled
press. “In terms
of cancer deaths that is equivalent to 9/11. And if I stay two more
days that will be another 9/11, and that is unacceptable.”
Listening
to Armstrong among the more than 150 supporters and advocates was
Amy Molenda, a 29-year-old mother of three from Tulsa, Oklahoma,
who was attending LIVESTRONG Day for the second year in a row. She
had just returned from her Congressman’s office where she
met with staff about budget cuts and funding. “She remembered
me from last year,” Molenda says of the staffer who heard
her story, “when I was here with Andrew.”
Andrew Molenda,
Amy’s husband, died in February of a rare
form of testicular cancer. He was 30. Amy was fulfilling a promise
to Andrew, who wanted her to stay involved in the advocacy work
he had become so devoted to, with support from the LAF staff. “They
e-mailed and kept in contact constantly when he was really sick,” Molenda
says. “It really helped because they also asked how I was
doing.”
Molenda met her representatives carrying the scrapbook
of her husband’s
news stories and fundraising efforts, and it was not uncommon to
have other advocates approach her to tell her they were there because
of Andrew, having followed his story on his blog (www.andrewsride.blogspot.com).
Molenda says Andrew’s death and becoming an advocate has changed
her. “I was always very shy,” she says. “But because
of Andrew I saw that one person can make a difference and touch
thousands in many different ways.”
Back
at the Ranch
Catching up with Lance Armstrong for a chat can
be challenging at best. While the seven-time Tour de France winner
may have retired from cycling last year, he is busier than ever.
In addition to his work with the LAF, Armstrong has ongoing commitments
with American Century Investments, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Dasani,
Discovery Channel, Nike and Sirius Satellite Radio.
Indeed, as part
owner of the Discovery Channel Pro Cycling Team, he is still very
invested in cycling and has launched a four-month marketing campaign
that will culminate in a cycling event in August called Race to
Replace. Cyclists from across the United States will compete for
a chance to become an honorary Team Discovery member for September’s
U.S. Pro Championship with proceeds from Race to Replace going to
the LAF.
Armstrong’s latest nod to his competitive streak has
been the announcement that he will run in the New York City Marathon
in November, and, of course, he was on hand in July for Team Discovery
at this year’s Tour de France.
At every event, whether it’s
the seat of an Indy Pace Car or the streets of New York, Armstrong
says it’s another opportunity
to talk about cancer. “Wherever I go, I talk about cancer—the
one thing that is going to affect all of us,” he says.
The
day we talk he is in California, where he has just spoken on a panel
at the Milken Institute Global Conference. His panel, entitled, “The
New Philanthropists and the Future of Medical Research Funding,” explored
ways that private funds can best be used for research in light of
the government’s funding decreases. Armstrong talked about
creating an army for change, movements in which philanthropists,
foundations and average individuals press both society and government
to increase funding and efficacy in research.
A few hours after our
talk he heads home to Austin, Texas, for a few days before beginning
another round of interviews, appearances and promotions. It’s
the first time in 13 years that Armstrong has been in Austin for
the spring, which prompts, “Yeah, I
get to see the bluebonnets.”
Now a 10-year survivor of metastatic
testicular cancer, Armstrong says that his only reminder comes when
he runs his fingers across his scalp and feels the scars from the
surgery where metastatic tumors were removed from his brain. Indeed,
on days at home much of his time is spent parenting his three children,
Luke, 6, and twins Grace and Isabelle, 4, and enjoying the moments
all parents enjoy, such as a recent comment from a teacher praising
Luke. “You
know your kids are special,” he says, “but when the
teacher says so, it’s great.”
The rest of his down time,
when it comes, is spent having fun, a word that comes up in regard
to many of his activities. When asked what he planned for his 10th
anniversary of survivorship on October 2, he replied, “I don’t
know, but it will be fun."
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