cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (Default)
Cimorene ([personal profile] cimorene) wrote2014-10-02 11:42 am
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Family History

On the Ashkenazi side of my extended family, 9 members in 3 generations have lived past 50, and of those 2 have died of breast cancer and another's been in treatment for a few years (male breast cancer in his case). Now we've found out my aunt is entering treatment for it too, and she's only 55.

Statistically, this is troubling. (Personally, my aunt's prognosis isn't bad and the rest of the oldies seem sanguine, so I'm not TOO upset.)

Thanks to my atheist great-grandparents, though, neither of my aunts were even aware that we're Ashkenazi, hadn't even heard the term -- and naturally, her doctor asked her specifically since it's a risk factor. (I didn't learn it from my family, either, even though my dad knows; I think it came up in the genetics chapter of high school biology... .) I said "I can't believe they didn't know that!" and my sister replied that she didn't either. =_=
msilverstar: decorated letter S (medieval s)

[personal profile] msilverstar 2014-10-02 10:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I've been deeply aware of my Ashkenazi heritage despite atheist grands and great-grands, but two of my step-uncles didn't know they were Jewish until after 20. That was from my grandmother marrying a low-level British Colonial Officer in the late 30s and them keeping religion hidden. Which is quite sad.