Marines GySgt Barbie Ritzco went onto eternal life this morning. - TopicsExpress



          

Marines GySgt Barbie Ritzco went onto eternal life this morning. Keep her son and family in your prayers. She fought a very hard battle with cancer. U.S. veteran Barbie Ritzco is an extraordinary human being. A U.S. Marine of 20 years, she was diagnosed with breast cancer during one of her tours in Afghanistan. She ran the 27.5 Marine Corps marathon while she was getting radiation, after eight rounds of chemo, and following a bilateral mastectomy. She has participated in countless projects to raise awareness and support, and she co-founded an empowerment group for women who choose not to have reconstruction after mastectomies. Online, she goes by the handle Marathon Barbie. She is known in her breast cancer community as The Warrior Queen. This is her story. It’s also the story of the many people she has helped along the way. And it’s why we’re trying to make this photo of her go viral. Ritzco discovered a lump in her left breast right before she was deployed to Afghanistan as a gunnery sergeant. She ignored it, feeling her priorities lay with her unit. When she was finally diagnosed with Stage IIIB Breast Cancer four months later in February of 2011, she left her troops and her unit; she’s still dealing with the feeling that she “abandoned and deserted them” today. Her cancer was aggressive and didn’t respond to chemo, which ultimately lead to her getting a mastectomy. Since she wasn’t planning on having reconstruction done after the operation, she opted for a double mastectomy so as not to be lopsided; a carrier of the BRCA2+ gene, she also had her ovaries removed. Ritzco told her story in 2012 while participating in the SCAR Project, a portrait series shot by photographer David Jay aimed at raising awareness for early onset breast cancer. It was during this time that she met Sara Bartosiewicz-Hamilton, another SCAR Project participant and BRCA2+ carrier; together, the two of them founded Flat & Fabulous, a Facebook group supporting and empowering women who choose not to have reconstruction after their mastectomies. A beautiful tattoo adorns Ritzco’s chest, creating the illusion of an open heart and a body filled with flowers. She had it done last year, and she is incredibly proud of it (and rightly so). It looks like this:
Posted on: Fri, 26 Sep 2014 19:36:33 +0000

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