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The very first step toward giving to others is grateful recognition of our own assets.
Nancy Brinker -
Today is a defining moment in the breast cancer movement, because we are making progress. Twenty years ago, when my sister Susan Komen asked me to do something to cure this disease, we couldn’t even imagine a day like today. Sixty-five thousand people turning out in our nation’s capital to once again race, run, walk, and pray for the cure. It is coming! It is coming!
Nancy Brinker
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So as long as this disease persists, I say we need more pink for all those who are suffering and dying. So I wear my pink proudly and I hope you do, too. It isn’t soft and fluffy. Pink is passionate and bold. Think of it as your membership card in a global community working to end a disease that will kill almost half a million people this year.
Nancy Brinker -
She's very knowledgeable; she helps a lot of breast cancer patients.
Nancy Brinker -
I know with Laurel’s strong spirit and determination, she will be able to beat this.”
Nancy Brinker -
I would like to think that my 25 years of helping to lead a movement and give shape to it and building a rather large nonprofit corporation, serving on many corporate boards … would serve as background for this job.
Nancy Brinker -
I am not just some rich society lady…This is not about manicures and going out to lunch.
Nancy Brinker -
….I realized the only way to deliver really conventional messages about breast cancer was through products and things people were doing that they weren’t afraid of and enjoying what they were doing.
Nancy Brinker
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I don’t like the Bushes, I love the Bushes. They’re wonderful people. They’re the most loyal friends. There’s nothing I wouldn’t do for them.
Nancy Brinker -
Have we come a long way? Yes. Have we gotten where we need to go? No. But it doesn’t help to take whacks at one another and stick your tongue out.
Nancy Brinker -
It's a big message. This is the real deal. It's not watered-down money.
Nancy Brinker -
There’s one thing we know. We can’t afford – and no one in the world can afford – to treat all the late-stage cancer.
Nancy Brinker -
Also, the Race for the Cure and the other events that we have because our job is to celebrate hope and to give people a vision for the future, not to depress them all the time and say, you know, you’re gonna die from this.
Nancy Brinker