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Still in the race

Runner has placed first seven times in the survivor’s category at the annual Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure. This year’s event is at Fashion Island.

September 24, 2008|By Cindy Frazier

Sandi Carter has been outrunning breast cancer for 18 years.

The Laguna Beach resident was diagnosed with the disease one year before the first Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure, which is now in its 17th year. The race is Sunday at Fashion Island in Newport Beach.

After a double mastectomy and six surgeries — for the treatment and follow-up restorative plastic surgery — you’d think the last thing she’d want would be to run in a 5K race.

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But she did — and won in the survivor’s division.

And she kept on winning — placing first in the survivor’s category in six more consecutive races.

“Every race was a milestone, a year of survivorship,” Carter said. “It was big for me to get to No. 7.”

A teacher when she was diagnosed in 1990, Carter says she changed a lot about her life after learning she had a potentially terminal illness.

“When you’re diagnosed, it’s bone-chilling,” she said. “It’s like ice water down the back of your neck, a confrontation with mortality.”

She retired from teaching and started doing things she wanted to — like running, playing tennis, skiing and going into business for herself, becoming a distributor for an air purifier manufacturer.

She even changed her license plate, to “JUSTDOT,” shorthand for the familiar Nike phrase.

The diagnosis was a wake-up call to her to make the rest of her life the best that it could be.

“It was life-changing in a good way,” she said of the cancer. “I had more urgency in my life, I looked at barriers I had set up for myself.”

She started getting into athletics, coaching the cross-country team at Laguna Beach High School. She started spending a month every year in Vail, Colo., treating herself to a ski vacation.

“I went into sports as an adult, and it helped in my recovery,” she said. “It was taking responsibility to stay healthy and fit.”

She feels lucky that she was diagnosed very early in the disease and did not have to endure radiation or chemotherapy. Her treatment, while disfiguring, was more bearable for her than the alternatives.

Through the years, she has watched as cancer detection has become more precise and treatments more individualized.

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