On a Personal Note: What Happened to My Face
This is not an April’s Fools post/joke (I wish!) although the timing is a little funny. Kind of? Ok, not really.
I wanted to step back from food for a minute and talk about something a little more personal today in the hopes that maybe my experience can help even just one person reading this.
I’ve been grateful over the years as my blog following has grown beyond what I ever expected – it’s given me a lot of reason to wonder if I’m really doing good and how I can do more. In addition to sharing delicious, tried-and-true recipes, I hope I can help people in other ways. Maybe today is such a day.
Warning: somewhat gruesome (depending on your tolerance level) pictures follow, not to mention more selfies than I’ve ever taken in my life, so read at your own risk. Also, this is taking a bit of courage to post; I hope I can count on you to be kind with your comments (no unnecessary compliments, not fishing for those, but please no cruelty).
Last fall, I ended up at the dermatologist’s office getting a spot on my back checked out. A deep, elliptical biopsy and 12 stitches later (plus a week or so of waiting) and the good news came back that it was not melanoma like the doctor suspected but instead a dysplastic nevus (precursor to melanoma but very good news, nonetheless).
While I was there for that appointment, I asked the doctor about a tiny spot on my nose that had been there for a couple months and seemed like a scab that wouldn’t heal. I actually felt a little silly for asking about it but figured it wouldn’t hurt since I was already there.
You can see the spot here (as I’m intently whistling – or maybe trash talking – while working on a puzzle over Thanksgiving last year):
After about three seconds of examining the spot, my doctor was 99% sure it was basal cell carcinoma. I went back in a week or so later for a biopsy and sure enough, a few days later, the results came back that the seemingly innocent spot really was basal cell carcinoma.
Basal cell carcinoma is a fairly common type of skin cancer but still taken seriously by my dermatologist. To my credit, I didn’t really freak out (kind of a shocker, really) because it was such a small spot and I figured it would be pretty easy to take care of.
Fast forward several weeks later to December 1 when I was scheduled to have MOHS surgery on that spot. I knew that I would be getting a local anesthetic for the area (needles in the nose – ouch!!!) and the doctor would little by little remove an area of skin including and around the basal cell carcinoma spot, send it to the lab to be inspected under a microscope and come back with results (all while I waited in the room).
That process would continue until the borders were clean – meaning, no cancer. I was certain, positively certain, it would be one small removal and I’d be out of there.
Unfortunately, that very tiny spot on my nose had decided to get naughty underneath the surface and after several cuts (and more dang shots in my nose!), clean borders were finally found. What I was left with was a decent sized (and quite deep) hole in the side of my nose.
{Click here for the super graphic surgery photos – probably not fit for young children or really anyone who gets queasy at the sight of gruesome, bloody pics}
I didn’t feel any pain (thanks to the terrible but blessed little shots) and didn’t feel any panic in that moment (thanks to a very competent doctor). That is, until he showed me the area in a mirror and drew with black marker up along my nose where he would now need to cut in order to pull skin down to cover the crater in my nose (after we ruled out the option of a skin graft since it would be nearly impossible to match the skin color and tone of my nose).
The pictures of that part of the procedure are too gory to share on a nice cooking blog like this, but suffice to say, I started to panic a little. Ok, a lot.
An hour later and I was the new owner of 20+ stitches front and center on my face (with more underneath the skin) and lots of iodine to enhance my natural coloring.
Oh, and the doctor did give me this note also. I’ll give you one guess as to whether or not I obeyed doctor’s orders.
I left the office. And I bawled all the way home (mistake: driving myself to and from the doctor; in hindsight, I was in a lot of shock and am grateful I made it home in one piece – my hands were shaking so bad and I could barely see because I was crying and my contacts were all fogged up).
For a few days I had to keep the bandage on and it didn’t seem so bad, although it hurt like the devil.
But then I took the bandage off. I was still in a lot of pain; it was so tender to the touch, and the bruising and swelling were just getting started. Plus, even though I know it could have been worse, I was struggling a bit with the emotional pain of wondering if my face would ever look “normal” again.
While at the doctor (and even before during the dysplastic nevus episode), I endured a stinging but deserved lecture from my doctor about sunscreen.
I’ve actually been a stickler about wearing sunscreen and covering up since I’ve had kids and been in my 30’s but before that? Sunscreen was never really that important to me. I never did the tanning bed thing but I spent a lot of time outdoors and I didn’t concern myself with hats and sunscreen as a teenager and in my 20’s, thinking the color on my face and arms and legs would be welcome and pretty, which is kind of laughable because I’m so fair skinned, I usually burn and stay pale.
Combine that with the fact that I grew up in a generation where many mothers didn’t sunscreen their children (yes, my mom feels a lot of guilt which is silly since she was one of millions letting their kids blister in the sun in the 70’s and 80’s) and you have a recipe for basal cell carcinoma.
And honestly, based on the fact that I’ve never been a bikini-wearing, beach bound, sun lover spending hours laying out in the sun, I’m certain that if this can happen to me, it can happen to anyone.
It’s an understatement to say our holiday season was very low key. I didn’t leave my house for several weeks and my 8-year old couldn’t look at me for a long time because he said “I’m not trying to be mean, mom, but your face gives my tummy the jigglies.” I can’t blame him.
I shouldn’t have been self-conscious but I was (and still am a little even though I’ll show you below how amazingly my face has healed in a few short months).
I’ve never worn makeup besides mascara and a little eyeshadow, but all of a sudden, I wondered how on earth I was going to cover this up once it healed a bit? (Spoiler alert: I’m still rocking the no-makeup look because it’s really hard to teach an old dog new tricks.)
That dang swelling decided to settle into the left side of my face and stay awhile. Plus, what do you think about that natural eyeshadow I’ve got going on? Who needs makeup, anyway??
You may or may not have noticed the lack of cooking videos over the last few months, but this basal cell carcinoma “experience” has put projects like that on hold and is also the reason, if you know me in person, I became even more of a homebody recluse from December to February than I already was.
It was such a relief to finally get the stitches out. Can you see how my left eye is pulling slightly in the corner?
That bothered me quite a bit for several months – I couldn’t close my eye all the way and my contact always felt like it was going to fall out (annoyingly, I couldn’t wear my glasses because they sat right there where the stitches ended at the top of my nose and it hurt too badly to wear them for a while).
As the weeks went on, it was amazing to start seeing the progress of healing, helped along, I have no doubt, by many, many prayers, lots of essential oils and Mederma. (Sorry about the death glare on the right; I take selfies very seriously, apparently.)
For the essential oils: I used a combination of rosehips oil, frankincense oil, helichrysum oil, and lavender oil.
As I think about the whole process, I’m beyond grateful I was in the dermatologist’s office back in early fall when I had a suspicious mole on my back.
I never ever ever would have made an appointment for a “silly” spot on my nose but being able to ask the doctor about it at the first appointment was divine intervention. Who knows what would have happened had the cancer had even more time to spread?
This experience has made me think a lot about what I’m going to do going forward when it comes to sun control for me and my kids, but it’s also made me realize that by sharing this with you, all of you, maybe I can bring awareness to how important sunscreen and covering up in the sun really is.
I already have a separate cancer history (from seven years ago) and combined with this latest basal cell carcinoma issue (and the data that shows there’s a high chance it will come back in some form on my body, especially my face), I’m determined to make changes to protect the future of my health even though we have been sticklers about sunscreen and hats for well over a decade now.
I’m throwing away my pride and deciding that even if I’m the only one at the lake and on the boat and at the park and working in the yard and at soccer games this summer wearing a large-brimmed hat and carrying an umbrella and donning sunscreen from head to toe and a long-sleeve swimsuit and even a long skirt at times, it’s ok. It’s really ok. It’s a small price to pay to have healthy skin; I certainly do not want to relive the events of the last few months.
Will you think about your sun exposure and that of your kids if you have them? For me? Think about it and consider ways you can protect you and your family by choosing the right sunscreen, wearing hats when possible, and being smart about sun exposure.
After spending countless hours online (why do I do this to myself?) looking at other stories and cases of basal cell carcinoma and MOHS surgery, I’m immensely grateful that in the end, my cancer spot and removal area really was quite small compared to how it could have turned out (my doctor said he’s spent 15+ hours chasing skin cancer around patient’s faces, and I wanted to kiss his feet that I was only there for a couple hours).
It’s miraculous and amazing how the body can heal. If you would have told me last December that I’d actually want to look in a mirror come March, I would have laughed (ok, probably cried) in your face. But I am so blessed that I have healed well and am continuing to heal.
Please learn from my experience.
Be smart! And stay safe in the sun, ok?
Love ya.
UPDATE: I cannot even tell you how overwhelmed I’ve been at your response to this post. Your kindness has brought me to tears more than once. More than that, though, have been the stories you’ve shared of your own skin cancer or of your loved ones. Many of you have emailed me personally and commented below that because of this post, you or a family member went in to the doctor and were able to either preempt a skin cancer situation or find out you had skin cancer of your own that desperately needed attention. In all my years of blogging, I’ve never been more impacted by your comments and stories (and again, your kindness). Thank you a million times over.
Thank you so much for writing this. I lost my 34yo sister two years ago to a five-year battle with melanoma. Her experience made me paranoid about every little oddity in my own skin, but after the second time I asked I was made to feel like such a hypochondriac. Thanks for this reminder to keep asking and to take wise precautions. Love your blog even more now!
Mel,
I meant to respond when I first read this post (the day or two after you published it here), but I was on my phone and got up and got busy…we all know how that goes. Yet, despite the distractions, I haven’t forgotten your bravery to not only tell your story but to show your beautiful face as you have healed. You said you weren’t looking for compliments, which is good, because now I feel free to dish them out! The truth is, you ARE beautiful. Your honesty, vulnerability and heart shine through that porcelain skin and those gorgeous eyes – and your honest words. Thank you so much for sharing something that is already helping so many of us! The other thing I wanted to say, and I feel it is almost more important, is that what you do here every day goes far beyond sharing recipes. You are bringing families to the dinner table. You make mothers, whose work is The Hardest, much easier. You bring a smile to her face and to the face of her family. By bringing us the the dinner table, you invite prayer, conversation, laughter, connection. When we have a God-given gift, when it has been a part of us and in us all of our lives, sometimes it is easy to feel like it isn’t all that special. Please know that what you do here is important and valued. The lemon blueberry cake was a huge hit at Easter, and we are having baked shells for dinner tonight. Your recipes are reliable and delicious and I use them all the time! My prayers are with you as you continue to heal. XO
Wow Mel! When I first saw the picture of your face I thought you were in a car accident. Thank you so much for having the courage to post this and for caring enough to do so. It confirms to me I should continue to cover up, use sunscreen, etc., especially on my little one who has fair skin like his dad. I thought I was being overly protective and paranoid so thank you for sharing your story. It is very much appreciated.
Oh my!! So glad you’re ok! Yes I will be a stickler about sunscreen from hence forth!! And wow, that healing process was amazing!
You precious thing!! I’ll make that appointment I’ve been putting off. Hugs!
Holy crap. Haven’t read the whole post, but I will later. This freaks me out. Poor thing. I was scheduled to get that same cancer taken off my nose by my eye two weeks ago. But changed my surgery for September. Ummm, now I’m thinking I need to schedule sooner. I just didn’t want to do it before summer. I will be put under general anesthesia. You look great now. I will read details later when I’m not cooking your recipes. So much love sent your way.
Thanks for sharing this. You look great Mel! Glad to hear your story had a happy ending 🙂 you are the best!
Thank you so much for sharing such a personal story. It was both a reminder and a welcomed wake-up call to protect not just our skin, but our bodies and lives in the choices we make. I am so sorry you went through what you did. Thank you for posting so many pictures! The body is truly amazing in the way it heals, inside and out… though not always at the same pace. You look great! Can’t wait to more recipes, the occasional video, and maybe a family shot every once in a while. Thank again, Mel!
Mel,
This very thing happened to my husband. He looked the same as you. We didn’t plan well either, because we thought this small dot can’t really harm anything. Needless to say it was a giant wound, just as yours. Sadly, we didn’t plan well because our daughters baptism was three days later. He was black, blue, puffy, and had his giant bandage on his nose. Let’s just say the pictures are memorable!!!!!!!! You look amazing, and I want you to know you are doing much good in the world! More than just a food blog.
I had you in mind all week after reading this and made sure to go get sunscreen for my son. This is the time of year when i always forget to apply it because it’s still a bit cool. So, thank you for the reminder!!!
Thank you, Mel for sharing! We are all thankful you are OK.
My oldest sister had Basel Cell in the same spot you did. She lost a quarter-sized chunk of her already small nose, plus a ‘forehead flap’ to aid in the healing-not pretty, she thought she looked like a Clingon (?) from Star Trek! She also had a dimed spot taken out on her cheek. I got checked out after that & had 2 small pre-cancerous spots burned off both right & left cheek. Typical little spots that were like a tiny sore or pimple that seemed not to heal=BIG RED FLAG! The last time I was in the sun on purpose without sunscreen was about 1984. The spots were found only 3 years ago at age 50. Staying out of the sun with tons of sunscreen & big hats could not take away damage done many years before. Thanks again, Mel, its a reminder for me to make an appointment to get checked out again!
You are so brave, thank you for sharing your story with all of us – you are an inspiration and beautiful inside and out.
I have never posted before either, but wanted to thank you so much for your post. It’s like the pebble you drop in the water-you never know how many lives you have touched and possibly saved) by being open and honest with your readers.
I have also had MOHS surgery twice on my face for basal cell and once on my arm for a melanoma that was in situ, caught in the very early stages, in additon to at least 2 dozen other removals over the years. Even with my history, I am still lax about using sunscreen. Thanks for the reminder.
Dearest Mel,
It takes someone extra special to be able to deal with something of this magnitude, and then have the courage to share it to help others. You truly are a rock star!
For all the people whose lives you’ve made happier and healthier may God bless you and protect you and your family!
One more reason that I like your blog! It was good, and brave of you to share your story, and pictures. I grew up the same lotionless way, and in November had a basal cell removed from the top of my ear. Again, good of you to share, and, you healed beautifully!
Thank you for sharing this. I’ll have a spot on my cheek checked out later this month thanks to this post!
Reason 4,552,781 that I like you and your blog. Hang in there!❤️
I’m curious which essential oils you used on your scars???
I made a blend of frankincense, helichrysum and lavender (after doing some digging online) – with some rose hip and fractionated coconut oil.
Thank you! I’ve had 5 basal cels myself and I’m only 38!
Hi Mel, is there anyway you can tell me how you blended these together i just had a tumor removed form between my eyebrows and now have an ugly scar…i’m just 3 weeks into it but would love to start treating it. many thanks
I lightly melted the coconut oil and then just stirred everything together. Does that help? Good luck with your recovery!
What a super reminder I’ll be much more aware – thank you for sharing !!!
Hey Mel, I just wanted to say thankyou for blogging about this serious health scare, I’m so glad it was caught early and that you have healed up so beautifully. I truly love this blog, and I am so grateful to you for the amazing recipes you share. Thanks and I will be more vigilant with the sunscreen from now on!
Oh my goodness! I read your story this morning (ok I skimmed it because yikes!) and have been thinking about it all day. I once heard that the majority of sun damage happens before age 18, and that checks out with what you said about becoming vigilant about sunscreen as an adult. Time to go put some sunscreen on my kids! Thanks for sharing this, Mel.
Thanks Mel! I also have been postponing a visit to the dermatologist to check out a spot. It’s been years and I keep making excuses. Who has time when you have a family to care for? After reading your blog, I finally made the appointment. I will see the doctor tomorrow! Thank you.
Bless you, sweetie. We all hurt for you and love you – especially those of us who have had to cope with the cancer issue. I use so many of your recipes and am so thankful for them. Who needs a cookbook? Best of luck and prayers for your continued healing and well-being.
I love your blog and thank you for posting this! I too am fair-skinned and burned a lot when I was a kid. I get myself checked often and we are also pretty militant with our kids about sunscreen and hats (more challenging as they enter their teen years, but we do our best). You surgeon did a FANTASTIC job, wow. I can’t even see a scar, despite the close up of your (very pretty) face. You are doing a great service with this post, thank you!
We are very careful about sunscreen and shade. I’m Hispanic so growing up I’d barely heard of sunscreen but my husband is a red head. For his dad it started with a spot. Last may his father was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma. His type had a 98% recovery rate. He died six months later. We are very careful about sunscreen and shade.
So, I also thought I was healing up nicely from surgery on my nose. That is when the plastic surgeon informed me that it takes at least a year for the swelling to go away even if you think you look like you are back to normal. Who knew!!
Also, my husband and I are both militant on the sunscreen thing since day one with the kids. SPF long sleeve swimsuit and the whole bit. I do the same for myself but cannot get my husband to put on sunscreen. I worry.
Wow, you look so great in your “healed up” picture! I had to have stitches in my face at the age of 19 and I worried too, but I got used to the minor scars and accepted them as part of me. Most people never notice them. Thank you for this article. I’m going to share it with my 19 year old daughter who loves the sun and won’t listen to my warnings. I love your blog. You really make me feel I know you as a person and I’m glad you shared this with all of us readers.
Calling the dermatologist today, thank you!
It is hard to put your pride aside! Be ever diligent even if the doctors say you are in the clear. My best friend’s mother died from Melanoma after a heart wrenching battle of five years. She had a spot removed when we were in high school (around 1992) and then she had another removed six years ago. Her doctor told her he had gotten it all, did a final scan and sent her on her way. However, she then passed out at the wheel while driving. She had cancer in her brain, which wasn’t part of anything scanned from previous skin removals! It has been a tragic loss and I cringe when I think of all the freckles I have from being outdoors all summer as a child. No one is to blame, but it can be prevented. Because of your popular blog, you can be an excellent spokesperson!! Best wishes and prayers!
Hi, Mel! I’m so glad you highlighted this issue – and that you’re recovery has gone so well (you look beautiful!). My skin is super-sensitive to sunlight, especially my face (due to rosacea). I have product recommendations. Non-chemical sunscreens work great!! They also are gentle to skin. Key ingredients are titanium dioxide and/or zinc oxide. I use CoTZ Face (spf 40) on my face; they also make a body sunblock (spf 50). Another good face product is Cera Ve Sunscreen (spf 50). Also, California Baby with 11% titanium dioxide is excellent; my whole family uses it. Check out Sun Precautions (for clothing, face masks, scarves, etc.) at http://www.Solumbra.com. I’ve used their products for over a decade. I love your recipes, and owe you big time for all you do. Hope these recommendations help. Best wishes!!
Wow! You are the second person in a weeks time that has shared a scary skin cancer story! Praise God both of you are just as beautiful today as you were before! I really needed to hear/see this as I am wintering in Arizona and have been spending lots of time outdoors and never gave it a thought until now. I will be putting sunscreen on daily from now on, and this summer I will have the grandkids every day and they will also be protected! Thank you so much for sharing something so personal…and scary!
Thank you for sharing!! You look as cute as always, honestly… I can’t see the stitches on the last picture. Thank goodness for great doctors! Also, thank you for the reminder. I’m dark skinned and never worry about this (although I should), and it makes me a very forgetful mother when it comes to protecting my children’s skin. My husband is fair skinned, and my children are as well… I need to be better! Thank you again. It must take a lot of gut to share something so personal with all of us, but it can prevent a lot of grief.
I had a similar spot on my forehead and it was Squamish cell carcinoma. 27 stitches later, I looked like Frankenstein! I really thought I would be disfigured forever. My Dr. told me most of the damage to my skin happened before I was 18. I slather my kids up with sun screen even if they’re just going out in the backyard.
As a fair skinned red head, I have been there, done that. Three big Mohs wounds on my neck left me wishing I should have had a face lift during the surgery. It’s no fun! Glad you are flawless again! Me, too.
My friend just shared this post with me, I have tried looking online for post MOHs treatment and everything was SCARY and extreme and very doom and gloom. So I really appreciate this post so much! My story/background sounds just like yours and I have a blog, too! Except, I just had this done last week, same side of the nose but was able to do the skin graft. They removed the bandage a week later and my nose looks like a scary movie/zombie horror! I have so many mixed emotions, thankful it’s gone and guilty for being so vain! I am so thankful you posted this so that I can have a little more perspective in regards to the healing process! Your nose looks so normal after only a matter of months and it gives me so much hope!! Thank you a thousand times!
Mel,
Thanks for sharing your story. We had a close friend go through a similar situation this fall. Having grown up in the lake country of Minnesota, I think I will be making that dermatology appointment.
You are truly beautiful inside and out!
Oh Mel, thanks for sharing your story. I’ve too, had a brush with skin cancer and had a wide excision done near my ankle, also for a mole that I thought was going to be nothing. That was in college, and everything ended up checking out ok (thankfully!), but I won’t lie, I haven’t been back since then for a skin check. Thanks for inspiring me to make an appointment. 🙂
Thank you for sharing your personal story with all of your fans. We ALL need reminded to take this issue more seriously. I am grateful to have read this post. You are beautiful inside & out.
While we don’t “know each other” – that is neither here nor there. Because I love you! Thanks for sharing. I’m so glad you’re doing better!
Mel, thank goodness everything turned out well and your lovely face it back to normal. What a scare you must of had and glad you are back to your good self xoxo
I am so grateful you shared your story. I am a mom of 3 and am ashamed at how lax I am with sun exposure. Thank you for helping me to make healthy changes! All my best to you! #youaresobrave
There are so many comments to this post that I doubt you’ll get to this one! First off you look amazing and the incisions have healed wonderfully. Merderma is magic in cream form! I hurt my leg a few years ago…like tore all the layers of skin off my shin (no pics to follow). It was a pretty large area on both legs but as soon as it healed I started to use Mederma and now you have to be looking for the scars to find them on my leg. I had to use it two times a day for 18 months but wow…magic.
Mel, we love you at our house! So glad that you are alright and that you are healing well. Thanks for the tips on keeping safe in the sun!
It takes a lot of courage to share something like this in the image obsessed world we live in. Thanks for caring about the well being of others so much! And I think you look completely adorable and the scar is not detracting from that in the slightest!!
You look great! It has healed so well! My 89 year old great aunt underwent a similar MOHS procedure last year that was even more extensive. It required a separate surgery where the created a flap on the side of her face that was there for quite awhile. Then she had to have another surgery to attempt to turn the flap back into a nose (they pretty much cut off her entire nostril with the MOHS). As a result, her nose is essentially terribly disfigured. Given her age and the extensiveness of the procedures we did not want to attempt any further procedures for cosmetic reasons, but it is terrible to see her so disfigured. It is a long road, but really, you look great!
Thanks you for sharing. I’ve had all three types of skin cancer and falsely thought the only ones I really needed to take seriously were the 3 times they were melanomas. I thought I was well informed but you made me aware that all need to be taken seriously. Good luck in your healing and future skin checks. so glad you have healed so well to date. You look awesome!
I love you for posting this!!! Thank you for having courage in order to bless my life and others!!!
Today, I went to the doctor for something I have been avoiding. Time will tell how it will all work out, but I finally had the courage to set and keep the appointment.
Good job taking care of yourself and encouraging the rest of us to do the same!
Thanks for being awesome Mel!!
You are still amazing and beautiful. Thanks for the sun safety reminder.
Oh sweetie, thanks for sharing. I have two big scars (arm and leg) and appreciate your advocacy. I can’t imagine the pain you experienced due to your location. But I must say, you healed much better than me! Anyway, it’s a lifelong thing. My leg was at age 20 (after I “won” ten free tanning bed treatments), my arm was December 2014, age 32. Again, thanks for sharing! PS can’t wait to try the cookie bars you shared today. Yum!
Thanks for this, Mel. I live in New Mexico, Ground Zero for skin cancer. We lost a member of the House of Representatives to squamous cell skin cancer that started on the top of his ear, an area unprotected by most men’s hats. It was an object lesson in being more careful.
I’m a fitness walker, and I always wear UPF 50 protective clothing and a good sun hat.
Looking forward to your suggestions.