leonne schillo-coady, a registered nurse with a master's degree in psychiatric nursing, runs the group kathleen is in. may 3oth will be my 1-year anniversary of finding the breast cancer at the breast center. when i walk into e breast center on may 3oth, i'm going to have hair, it's going to be colored, and i'll have two breasts that match pretty well. i'll be looking good for '91. ha ha ha! maybe this idea of support isn't just making the patient feel better and dealing with their day-to-day operations better. maybe this is really impacting physiologically. at's what, what i believe, and that's what i've seen with my women. they're growing up now, and, um... there's this part of me still that has a hard time sharing cancer with them. i sort of want to protect them, but i feel now that they're getting a little bit older. they'r15 and 13 now. oh. they should-- yeah. they're ok. we talk a little bit more about it and my fears of "am i going to be ok?" anand i still-- reoccurrences. feel things and immediately just panic. we've all been through that. when i do get depressed, i go in and i