Kelly Preston Dies @ 57

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:John Travolta is well known to be gay and Kelly was his beard so I wonder if he’ll come out of the closet now.


too trapped by Scientology to do so . . .
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If she drank a ton of arsenic laced white wine, that might have done it. Fairly confident that’s what caused my mother’s breast cancer.

PS - BC can kill you. Lots of women undergo treatment, are in remission, then it comes back at stage 4 and kills you. Even with the best treatment, a two year battle followed by death is fairly typical.


It is NOT typical. Stop scaremongering, and look at the actual survival rates of the various stages of BC. If you have stage I and it's treated, it doesn't magically "come back" and kill you.

Jesus, the ignorance on this thread.


new pp but yes, it can come back. my mother had it three separate times with 6 years between 1st and 2nd instance and then 3 years between 2nd and 3rd. she never drank and she never smoked and she definitely never took a drug or had IVF. Now she is dying of cancer elsewhere in her body after about 15 years of the "all clear" after her 3rd BC. She may be an unusual case but not completely unheard of.

So sadly, you don't know what you are talking about (to quote a greatly over used DCUM phrase).

+ 1

My mother was diagnosed at barely stage 2, got excellent treatment and was given the all clear. Then 3 years later, she was diagnosed stage 4 and died within 2 years.

I know several women with similar stories.

There is no cure for cancer. There is a reason the word is “remission” and not “cure”.


These are all tragedies, and I am no doctor, but to go from diagnosis to death in two years suggests she may have been in the smaller percentage of women who when diagnosed are in stage 4. It is possible. Or maybe she had triple negative breast cancer, the hardest and most aggressive type to treat. Even the two tragic examples above point to 15 years and about 5 years of living after diagnosis. This was two years. I agree she was an outlier. Yes, cancer can behave unpredictably but i think many more women are surviving breast cancer, but yes for some it can return and go to stage IV. For others, it is indeed cured ie. Surgically removed and contained.


It’s possible she had a lumpectomy years ago and this two year battle was the recurrence.

Which celebrity battled ductile cancer recently? Was it her?



Rita Wilson (Tom Hanks' wife) recently battled breast cancer.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Ladies - don’t have kids so late in life. Studies show there is a very strong link to breast cancer. RIP Kelly


Disbelieving. How could there be a link?


I don't think the link is age per se. The problem is to have a kid that late in life, you probably have to undergo a lot of medical intervention.


It actually is both: age and hormones.

Pregnancy gives your body a break for 10 months (plus breastfeeding). Google it.

The articles also indicate that ivf treatment includes a mammogram (presumably because of the link), so cancer is often detected earlier.


Pregnancy gives your body a break from what?


The cyclical, hormonal shifts in estrogen and other hormones that happens monthly when menstruating. As well as a reprieve in the shedding of the uterine lining (where cells have opportunity to mutate and potentially turn cancerous) in uterus. I think there is a small heightened risk for breast cancer about a decade after childbirth, then it levels off and over time i think more births are protective. I do not discount the death of her son either. Adverse stressful events in the years before diagnosis is a real thing. Google or see previous link. She may have had the BRCA gene. She has had a great life and some very real trauma too.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Will scientology find him a new wife eventually? Will he marry the nanny or nurse?


You are a disgusting human being.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If she drank a ton of arsenic laced white wine, that might have done it. Fairly confident that’s what caused my mother’s breast cancer.

PS - BC can kill you. Lots of women undergo treatment, are in remission, then it comes back at stage 4 and kills you. Even with the best treatment, a two year battle followed by death is fairly typical.


It is NOT typical. Stop scaremongering, and look at the actual survival rates of the various stages of BC. If you have stage I and it's treated, it doesn't magically "come back" and kill you.

Jesus, the ignorance on this thread.


new pp but yes, it can come back. my mother had it three separate times with 6 years between 1st and 2nd instance and then 3 years between 2nd and 3rd. she never drank and she never smoked and she definitely never took a drug or had IVF. Now she is dying of cancer elsewhere in her body after about 15 years of the "all clear" after her 3rd BC. She may be an unusual case but not completely unheard of.

So sadly, you don't know what you are talking about (to quote a greatly over used DCUM phrase).

+ 1

My mother was diagnosed at barely stage 2, got excellent treatment and was given the all clear. Then 3 years later, she was diagnosed stage 4 and died within 2 years.

I know several women with similar stories.

There is no cure for cancer. There is a reason the word is “remission” and not “cure”.


These are all tragedies, and I am no doctor, but to go from diagnosis to death in two years suggests she may have been in the smaller percentage of women who when diagnosed are in stage 4. It is possible. Or maybe she had triple negative breast cancer, the hardest and most aggressive type to treat. Even the two tragic examples above point to 15 years and about 5 years of living after diagnosis. This was two years. I agree she was an outlier. Yes, cancer can behave unpredictably but i think many more women are surviving breast cancer, but yes for some it can return and go to stage IV. For others, it is indeed cured ie. Surgically removed and contained.


No you're not a doctor and what you also fail to realize is that cancer takes DECADES to grow. DECADES.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Will scientology find him a new wife eventually? Will he marry the nanny or nurse?



What a horrible comment. What is wrong with you? It was clear he was deeply in love with his wife.



Ummm...have you seen the picture of him kissing a man on the lips? Or read about his massages...


You are still a despicable POS human being. There is something terribly wrong with you and your thought process.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:John Travolta is well known to be gay and Kelly was his beard so I wonder if he’ll come out of the closet now.


too trapped by Scientology to do so . . .


Why are Trumpers infesting this site? Go away both of you. You are garbage humans.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If she drank a ton of arsenic laced white wine, that might have done it. Fairly confident that’s what caused my mother’s breast cancer.

PS - BC can kill you. Lots of women undergo treatment, are in remission, then it comes back at stage 4 and kills you. Even with the best treatment, a two year battle followed by death is fairly typical.


It is NOT typical. Stop scaremongering, and look at the actual survival rates of the various stages of BC. If you have stage I and it's treated, it doesn't magically "come back" and kill you.

Jesus, the ignorance on this thread.


new pp but yes, it can come back. my mother had it three separate times with 6 years between 1st and 2nd instance and then 3 years between 2nd and 3rd. she never drank and she never smoked and she definitely never took a drug or had IVF. Now she is dying of cancer elsewhere in her body after about 15 years of the "all clear" after her 3rd BC. She may be an unusual case but not completely unheard of.

So sadly, you don't know what you are talking about (to quote a greatly over used DCUM phrase).

+ 1

My mother was diagnosed at barely stage 2, got excellent treatment and was given the all clear. Then 3 years later, she was diagnosed stage 4 and died within 2 years.

I know several women with similar stories.

There is no cure for cancer. There is a reason the word is “remission” and not “cure”.


These are all tragedies, and I am no doctor, but to go from diagnosis to death in two years suggests she may have been in the smaller percentage of women who when diagnosed are in stage 4. It is possible. Or maybe she had triple negative breast cancer, the hardest and most aggressive type to treat. Even the two tragic examples above point to 15 years and about 5 years of living after diagnosis. This was two years. I agree she was an outlier. Yes, cancer can behave unpredictably but i think many more women are surviving breast cancer, but yes for some it can return and go to stage IV. For others, it is indeed cured ie. Surgically removed and contained.


No you're not a doctor and what you also fail to realize is that cancer takes DECADES to grow. DECADES.


I understand. I was just noting that if she was diagnosed two years ago, her death was more rapid than it is for many, not all. There are many types of breast cancer but overall many women are statistically living longer. Susan Love, the breast cancer specialist talks about this at length.
Anonymous
It is very easy to forget about the link between alcohol and cancer. Despite the strong data, I always tend to think first about genetic risks or smoking, or poor lifestyle choices (eating a ton of red meat, etc). But it is well documented.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It is very easy to forget about the link between alcohol and cancer. Despite the strong data, I always tend to think first about genetic risks or smoking, or poor lifestyle choices (eating a ton of red meat, etc). But it is well documented.


She did drugs, too, between high school and her late 40s. That's a lot of years of wear and tear.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wonder if Scientology allowed her to actually get regular medical treatment for this. So sad.


Scientologists are allowed to get medical treatment and use prescription drugs


She was being treated at MD Anderson.


Yes, the religion doesn't ban you from getting medical treatment. There's fairly little said about medicine by L. Ron Hubbard.


Of course it does. You know very little about Scientology.
Anonymous
I didn’t want any more bad news.

Rest In Peace beautiful Kelly.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Will scientology find him a new wife eventually? Will he marry the nanny or nurse?


You are a disgusting human being.


I know two widowers who married the nurse who cared for their deceased wife. It’s a thing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wonder if Scientology allowed her to actually get regular medical treatment for this. So sad.


Scientologists are allowed to get medical treatment and use prescription drugs


She was being treated at MD Anderson.


Yes, the religion doesn't ban you from getting medical treatment. There's fairly little said about medicine by L. Ron Hubbard.


Of course it does. You know very little about Scientology.

Then educate us oh wise one.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If she drank a ton of arsenic laced white wine, that might have done it. Fairly confident that’s what caused my mother’s breast cancer.

PS - BC can kill you. Lots of women undergo treatment, are in remission, then it comes back at stage 4 and kills you. Even with the best treatment, a two year battle followed by death is fairly typical.


It is NOT typical. Stop scaremongering, and look at the actual survival rates of the various stages of BC. If you have stage I and it's treated, it doesn't magically "come back" and kill you.

Jesus, the ignorance on this thread.


new pp but yes, it can come back. my mother had it three separate times with 6 years between 1st and 2nd instance and then 3 years between 2nd and 3rd. she never drank and she never smoked and she definitely never took a drug or had IVF. Now she is dying of cancer elsewhere in her body after about 15 years of the "all clear" after her 3rd BC. She may be an unusual case but not completely unheard of.

So sadly, you don't know what you are talking about (to quote a greatly over used DCUM phrase).

+ 1

My mother was diagnosed at barely stage 2, got excellent treatment and was given the all clear. Then 3 years later, she was diagnosed stage 4 and died within 2 years.

I know several women with similar stories.

There is no cure for cancer. There is a reason the word is “remission” and not “cure”.


These are all tragedies, and I am no doctor, but to go from diagnosis to death in two years suggests she may have been in the smaller percentage of women who when diagnosed are in stage 4. It is possible. Or maybe she had triple negative breast cancer, the hardest and most aggressive type to treat. Even the two tragic examples above point to 15 years and about 5 years of living after diagnosis. This was two years. I agree she was an outlier. Yes, cancer can behave unpredictably but i think many more women are surviving breast cancer, but yes for some it can return and go to stage IV. For others, it is indeed cured ie. Surgically removed and contained.


No you're not a doctor and what you also fail to realize is that cancer takes DECADES to grow. DECADES.


I understand. I was just noting that if she was diagnosed two years ago, her death was more rapid than it is for many, not all. There are many types of breast cancer but overall many women are statistically living longer. Susan Love, the breast cancer specialist talks about this at length.


Firstly you're assuming this based on very little actual information. Secondly that something is diagnosed at a certain point, doesn't mean it's a new emergence of the disease, its just newly diagnosed.
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