AUBURN, Ala. – In her husband’s hospital room, two days after a car accident that would leave him wheelchair-bound for months, Shana Askew Daniels prayed over his broken body, then noticed something off about her own.
A lump in her right breast, surprising given that it hadn’t been there a month earlier during her annual physical.
Marquis suggested that Shana ask one of his nurses for her opinion.
“’Mrs. Daniels, we think you need to get checked,’” the nurse told Shana, who scheduled the appointment as soon as Marquis went home from the hospital weeks later.
“We weren’t really prepared for that mentally,” she said. “I had to show strength and be strong for my family because at that time, he couldn’t do anything. He was solely dependent on me for everything.”
An abnormal mammogram led to a biopsy, which revealed ductal carcinoma.
“I was speechless,” Shana remembered. “My heart just dropped.”
On Dec. 16, 2019, one month to the day after Marquis Daniels’ accident, the already treacherous storm the family faced was now twice as menacing.
“We have kids and they look up to us,” Marquis said. “That was probably the toughest move, having to tell them, to see their faces and help them understand what’s going on.
“There’s times when you’re alone, you feel like the world is closing in on you, you start wondering and crying, you break down. You have to get it out of you, but you have to stay focused and stay positive throughout the whole process.”
While Marquis recovered, he mustered the strength to support Shana in her time of need.
“You have to water what you want to grow,” he said. “She was watering me when I was hurting and I had to do the same for her. It’s a blessing that we’re here today. It lets you know that family is more important than anything, having love for each other.”
Surgery and 17 chemotherapy treatments – one every three weeks - followed. On Feb. 3, 2021, 15 months after Shana first discovered the lump, she rang the bell at the Cancer Treatment Center of America in Newnan, Georgia, signifying victory over cancer.
“It was awesome to finally be done with that. I’m cancer free as of now,” she said. “The plan is to keep it that way. I’m praying that it doesn’t reoccur and I’m doing everything in my power to keep it from reoccurring.”