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Why Walk!   
There are many reasons to be a part of the Support-A-Walk!

     

You can make a difference

Raise Awareness
Breast and ovarian cancer touch thousands of lives. Walking with us promotes understanding, awareness, education and early detection.

Celebrate and Remember
Honor a family member or loved one affected by breast or ovarian cancer by walking in their name.

Provide Help and Support
Your participation and donations will help fund Support Connection’s free, confidential counseling services and programs that help people cope with breast and ovarian cancer.

In the words of people who have been helped by Support Connection....
See how your contributions will touch the lives of people who have been affected by breast and ovarian cancer:

If it weren’t for Support Connection, who knows where my Mom would be now. For all the hope they gave to us, I will never forget them. ~R.D.

You were a wonderful resource to me when I was going through cancer. I don’t know what I would have done without you. ~S.O.

The compassion and passion these women bring to peer counseling is what makes it healing and effective. ~C.G.

I wish I had known about such a group years ago. ~M.O.

What my wife has gained from Support Connection is priceless. The confidence she gets from her support group, along with the love of her family, empowers her to face the rest of her life. ~C.K.

No one wants breast or ovarian cancer to happen in their family, but it is truly reassuring to know that there is a wonderful resource such as Support Connection in our community. ~M.H.

 

 

 

 

 


 

It feels great to be part of Support-A-Walk

Last year’s Support-A-Walk brought nearly 9,000 participants. We asked some of those participants to share with us their feelings about why they walk:

Giving Something Back

Cathy Grossi’s daughters, Stephanie (l) and Nicole (r). The girls have walked with their mom who hopes they are learning a valuable life-long lesson.
Like many survivors I have a passion to help those affected by cancer, whether they be a survivor, a caregiver, or a friend or relative of a survivor. We all need someone sometime.  We all need hope. 

Fundraising and participating in the Walk is my way of giving back. It is also my way of giving something to my daughters for tomorrow. I hope that I am giving them the knowledge that one person can make a difference.
~Cathy Grossi


In Support of My Wife
I participated in Relay for Life in Mahopac 2 years ago - my first exposure to participating in a group fundraising event for cancer. Since my wife is a breast cancer survivor, I thought it was the least I could do for her. Unfortunately, cancer is not a stranger to our family after losing my father and a brother-in-law to the disease. 

The Support Connection Walk was yet another opportunity to honor family and friends who have faced this challenge. We walked together as a family, with friends and neighbors and it was very emotional for me. It was also very inspiring for me because the huge turnout showed me that cancer affects many, many people no matter what their background. I witnessed many smiles and tears. I enjoyed being there to support my wife and her friends who have faced breast cancer and have been a source of support for us during our time of need.
~Joseph Bauer


For the Community
We moved to Yorktown 12 years ago, and my wife, Jane, was eager to get involved in the community. We learned about Support Connection and the terrific things they do for families who are impacted by breast cancer. It became something that our children looked forward to - and we've had more than one walk through FDR Park with a squirming child on my shoulders! Being part of the event started out as a great way to help the important work of Support Connection, and it has truly made us feel like we're helping an important community based service.

In recent years, like so many other families, we've had people close to us who have been diagnosed with cancer, and now we walk in their honor, too. To our family, the Support Connection Walk has been one of the important rites of autumn. We see friends and neighbors, we reminisce about past years, and we lace up our sneakers and do something important for cancer patients and their families.

It's a privilege to be able to contribute to this great cause - and there's no such thing as a small gesture when you join with so many others from your community, FOR your community. That's what Support Connection ultimately has meant to us.
~Ed Barbini


Remembering A Friend

Cheryl Hein (r) & members of the Flip Flop team at the 2007 Support-A-Walk.
As a breast cancer survivor, I have always admired that people come together and walk for a cause.  When I was in the hospital, my dear friend, Carolyn Losa, did not come to visit me.  When I got home and called her, she told me she had ovarian cancer. She and I and friends walked the year before she passed, and the walk was such a gift to both of us.

Last year we walked in Carolyn’s memory and will do so this year. She was so beautiful, a positive person, someone who made flip-flops that made others smile and I will never forget her. I am a survivor, she wasn’t, but she will never be forgotten.
~Cheryl Hein


Paying Tribute - Spirit & Love
Every year for the past ten years, my husband David, my daughter Becky and several of her friends have participated in the Walk in memory of our dear friend Judi, and in tribute to the countless other women and their families who are battling breast and ovarian cancer.

What is most remarkable to me is the spirit and love communicated by everyone affiliated with Support Connection: the staff, the volunteers, the survivors, the women still in the midst of treatment, and the community that reaches out to show they care.
~Laura Scharf


Experiencing a Real High
I lost my sister to breast cancer 8 years ago and am now myself a 3-year survivor. I had learned about Support Connection a number of years before my own diagnosis when my son’s friend lost his mom, Sally Vickery, to breast cancer. She had been very involved with the organization. Once I regained some of my physical strength, I called to enroll in a wellness program. I tried to exercise when I could, but it has never been one of my favorite things. I knew I needed to build myself up and the Walk seemed to be a meaningful way for me to do just that.

As my husband and I arrived at the Walk for the first time last year, we were amazed at how many people that we knew. It was a great feeling to see so many friends and neighbors and by the time I knew it, I was at the finish line. I really enjoyed everyone along the route cheering us on, and I experienced a real high and a great sense of accomplishment that I had actually done it. In fact, I’m anxious to do it again this year!
~Phyllis Nadelhaft

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Questions? Call Support Connection at 914-962-6402.