GAZELLE MAGAZINE Vol, 2. Issue 5 | Page 72

WOMEN WHO INSPIRE BREAST CANCER SURVIVOR LOVES LIFE…ALL OF IT Amy Camie embraces every day with hope and happiness By VICKI BENNINGTON No one rejoices in life more than Creve Coeur area resident Amy Camie, who has been on a roller coaster journey since 2010, though for the last couple of years, she’s done nothing but climb to new heights. As a harpist, Amy’s soothing, healing music has served as therapy for others for many years - particularly for cancer patients and their families. When she was diagnosed with breast cancer in December 2010, she felt like her life had prepared her for the experience. Growing up, she was surrounded by music through her parents - both were music teachers and heavily involved in community music organizations. She began playing the harp in the fourth grade, and the instrument has now been at her side for more than 40 years. In 1989, she began to think of her music in a different way after a sick friend said that it made her relax. With the help of a music therapist, Amy prepared a questionnaire that was sent with her harp music to 50 people of all ages and demographics. The overwhelming response was that the music inspired deep relaxation. “My sole (and soul) gift is music,” she said. “My husband, John’s, is accessing silent knowledge. He taught me a series of healing chants that awoke something inside of me.” She recorded “The Magic Mirror” CD – not from printed music – but from her heart and soul. She believes that more than the notes and the music, the energy and consciousness that comes from within as she plays, helps create therapeutic, healing properties. 72 After recording the CD, Amy met Dr. William Collins, a psychologist and neurotherapist, who used “The Magic Mirror” as a basis of a Scientific Arts Foundation pilot study to explore the impact of the CD on brain wave function of four women undergoing chemotherapy treatments. Results indicated that after listening to the CD daily for 10 days, it increased neurological function, and the women were less anxious, more relaxed, and more able to focus. In another pilot study, Dr. David Kossor and Dr. Abdul Waheed tested saliva, which indicated a sustained impact on the immune system for up to 72 hours after listening to the CD just one time. As a result of the findings, doors began to open for Amy at hospitals and treatment centers, where she integrated with cancer patients, and did what she felt she was meant to do – helping others with her music. GAZELLE STL Photo by Jennifer Korman Photography “When I was diagnosed with breast cancer it was almost surreal,” she said. “But I knew it was part of my journey.” She had a lumpectomy, and underwent a series of chemotherapy and radiation treatments, and listened to “The Magic Mirror” twice a day. She documented everything to keep family and friends informed and to help purge her emotions and thoughts. Each time she faced a negative experience, she tried to turn it around. “I knew I was going to lose my hair,” she said. “As women, hair helps us define ourselves. Without it, you feel a sense of vulnerability. But I had to learn to let go.”