Top 1200 Terminal Cancer Quotes & Sayings - Page 16

Explore popular Terminal Cancer quotes.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
The crows that are predatory are something you have to deal with. For me, they also become associated with cancer cells.
Conflict is like cancer; early detection increases the possibility of a healthy outcome.
I consider myself pretty fearless, but the one thing I have always been frightened of is cancer. — © Jane Green
I consider myself pretty fearless, but the one thing I have always been frightened of is cancer.
We have thousands of patients and family members who are dealing with dual devastation, cancer and the hurricane.
You know, Mike Milken, the money that he has raised for cancer research has been remarkable.
It is not possible to make a certain evaluation...that cancer may be arrested if 'caught early'.
After a couple bouts with cancer and everything, black cats are nothin', you know?
I pictured myself as a virus or a cancer cell and tried to sense what it would be like.
Maybe if we said that sin causes cancer, people would take it more seriously.
It was very clear that I had breast cancer. From a man's perspective, I'm thinking, 'Why me?'
I think a lot of people just aren't aware how young you can be and be diagnosed with breast cancer.
Once cancer happens it changes the way you live for the rest of your life.
With breast cancer, it's all about detection. You have to educate young women and encourage them to do everything they have to do. — © Bill Rancic
With breast cancer, it's all about detection. You have to educate young women and encourage them to do everything they have to do.
Spending the day with you has been marginally better than watching mother die of cancer.
[My mom] had this amazing attitude in the face of everything, including when she got cancer.
Having cancer gave me membership in an elite club I'd rather not belong to.
It’s one thing to run across Canada, but now, people are really going to know what cancer is.
I think having the cancer allowed me to be able to freely talk about my faith.
I had a cancer scare in the early 90s, and for a few months, I wondered if I would make it.
When I was at Stanford, I was actually in the cancer biology program, but I mostly focused on infectious disease.
I had uterine cancer, which is the most under-funded and under-researched of all the female cancers.
Such a strange thing. What was terrible for a healthy fetus has been wonderful at defeating the cancer cells.
I've always been very involved in anything that had to do with lung disease or cancer.
I began seeing my wife, Kathleen, while I was undergoing treatment for prostate cancer.
My mother battled cancer for 12 years before losing her fight.
I hate to talk about typecasting, because being typecast as Columbo ain't cancer.
The suicidally disgruntled were legion, And their enemies included any and all Americans, Brits, Canadians, Danes, et cetera; or, conversely, all Moslems, dark-skinned people, non-English-speakers, immigrants; all Catholics, fundamentalists, atheists; all liberals, all conservatives...For such people the consummate act of moral clarity was a lynching or a suicide bombing, a fatwa or a pogrom. And they were ascendant now, rising like dark stars over a terminal landscape.
I've sort of knocked cancer down to size. It shouldn't be something that makes people uncomfortable.
Tobacco, UV rays, viruses, heredity, and age are the main causes of cancer.
I have a cousin who, at age 36, passed away from cancer, and she left three girls.
I was told 50 percent of the population gets cancer. Everybody is going to be affected.
I have been extremely lucky; I am a person who is currently living with a cancer that is under control.
The only things that are immortal in this world are government programs and cancer cells in petri dishes.
It might be hard to believe, but as difficult as cancer was, in some ways it was good for me.
The laugh-count is right up there with being diagnosed with late-stage cancer.
When our bodies are violated by this horrible disease of cancer, we're in total shock because it's so unexpected.
I had a cancer scare in the early '90s, and for a few months, I wondered if I would make it.
If you've ever had a brush with cancer, you're always thinking a pain might be something serious. — © Ann Jillian
If you've ever had a brush with cancer, you're always thinking a pain might be something serious.
Cancer is the ultimate nemesis that hangs in the balance for one in three women and one in two men in their lifetime.
The vast knowledge we have to prevent cancer, heart disease, and other chronic illnesses is staggering.
Fighting cancer taught me more than I ever could have imagined, but I've beaten it.
If a black doctor discovers a cure for cancer, ain't no hospital going to lock him out.
My mother died of lung cancer last year. I felt helpless. As an economist, I thought, 'What can I do?'
Scores of studies support the power of certain natural foods to prevent cancer.
Both of my grandmothers were diagnosed with breast cancer - one is a survivor and one passed away.
I have a new found respect for women who have been through breast cancer and this surgery.
Above all, cancer is a spiritual practice that teaches me about faith and resilience.
We all have idealism. We think we're healthy and then, all of a sudden, one day, you have cancer. The truth has a mind of its own. — © Oliver Stone
We all have idealism. We think we're healthy and then, all of a sudden, one day, you have cancer. The truth has a mind of its own.
I always used to say to myself, I'm going to die of lung cancer. That's the choice I'm making.
I think Donald Trump is a complete and utter buffoon and a cancer to our society.
Live today as if you don't have tomorrow: my husband was diagnosed and killed by cancer within six months.
I believe the biggest breakthroughs on cancer could come from brilliant researchers based in India.
My main frustration is the fear of cancer from low dose radiation, even by radiologists.
I've always been quite driven so it wasn't like the cancer was my wake-up call.
Cancer is a disease that is mysterious, headstrong and makes its own rules. And mine, to this date, is incurable.
Certain types of cancer patients are finally being cured thanks to immunotherapy.
I don't want fear or cancer to define me, but it's always in the back of your mind.
Terrorism is not a public health threat, relative to cancer and heart disease and malaria and so forth.
Time is shortening. But every day that I challenge this cancer and survive is a victory for me.
Yes, I have cancer and it might not go away, but I can still have a future because life goes on.
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