http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/08/07/for_kerry_ride_challenge_is_personal/I loved Cam Kerry's statement about his brother,which I've highlighted in bold below. Yeah, that's my senator, alright! :)
Senator John Kerry is set to participate in his seventh Pan Mass Challenge, a 110-mile bicycle ride to raise money for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute. (Gerald Herbert/Associated Press/File)
FOR KERRY, CHALLENGE IS PERSONAL
Kennedy’s memory, wife’s illness help fuel senator’s cancer ride
By Susan Milligan, Globe Staff | August 7, 2010
WASHINGTON — It was nearly one year ago that Senator John Kerry witnessed the final days of his friend and colleague, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, as the legendary lawmaker fought a losing battle with brain cancer. Kerry himself was diagnosed eight years ago with prostate cancer, a disease that killed his father.
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It will be Kerry’s seventh such ride for the program, and among fellow riders will be his occasional training partner, Scott Brown, the Massachusetts Republican.
But this year will be different, Kerry said, because of the connections of two women: Victoria Reggie Kennedy, who has sent appeals across the country for people to sponsor Kerry’s ride in memory of her husband, and Kerry’s wife, Teresa, who has been fighting breast cancer.
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With Teresa’s fight and the memory of Senator Kennedy in mind, the 66-year old Massachusetts senator, who has two artificial hips, has been rising before dawn in the nation’s capital, saddling his bike for a grueling training regimen to prepare for the bike-a-thon for cancer research. He also hopes his ride brings attention to what he calls environmental causes of cancer, such as toxins in the air and water.
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time, Teresa Heinz Kerry urged women to get regular mammograms, a test she said detected her cancer early.
His wife, the senator said, is doing well after surgery and radiation treatments for breast cancer, and the couple are both proponents of early diagnosis.
Some of Kerry’s closest friends said Kerry rarely discusses his own struggles with cancer, although he did address it publicly during his 2004 campaign.
“He’s never mentioned it to me once, and we go back decades,’’ said US Representative William D. Delahunt, Democrat of Quincy. The bike ride, said Delahunt, “is his way of expressing concern, to express commitment, to express his feelings.’’
Chris Greeley, a former staff member and friend of the senator’s for nearly 30 years, recalled how he was cheering on his wife during a Waltham breast cancer walk-a-thon recently when he heard Kerry’s voice, from a bike, yell out a hello.
Biking has long been a kind of therapy for Kerry, whom friends describe as perpetually in motion, even in a Senate chamber that seems to slog along at a slow, partisan pace of late.
He travels with his bike, taking it along on his 2004 presidential campaign and even making time for a long excursion at the Democratic National Convention in Denver in 2008. Staff members say that despite his busy Senate schedule, he insists on carving out time for rides.
“John’s only got one intensity level, all out,’’ Cameron Kerry, the senator’s brother and riding partner, said in an interview.
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Senator Christopher Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat who survived prostate cancer last year, said Kennedy had once told him about Kerry riding through torrential rains to complete a ride from Boston to Hyannis.
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