Nearly 200 attend Mad Hatters Tea

It was another buzzing benefit for the Mad Hatters Tea Party in Sequim on Friday, Oct. 7, as about 195 women attended the sold-out event to raise awareness about breast cancer, support survivors and commemorate those lost to the disease.

It was another buzzing benefit for the Mad Hatters Tea Party in Sequim on Friday, Oct. 7, as about 195 women attended the sold-out event to raise awareness about breast cancer, support survivors and commemorate those lost to the disease.

The tea was held at Sunland Golf & Country Club, 109 Hilltop Drive, Sequim, and throngs of women arrived wearing hats from the chic to the comical. As always, bras in pinks and purples featured prominently as hat decorations.

Even Mrs. Olympic Peninsula, Magan Waldron, who’s vying to become Mrs. Washington, sported an huge pink net, early 19th-century style hat decorated with a rose-colored bra. Waldron said she attended because she supports Operation Uplift as part of her platform.

Operation Uplift is a nonprofit cancer support group, which was founded in Port Angeles in 1983, that provides support for survivors of all types of cancer, both men and women. Operation Uplift and the Olympic Medical Cancer Center received donations of $3,500 each from the Mad Hatters at the event.

Each annual event includes the survivor countdown — about half a dozen women stood this year as survivors of 25 years or more.

“This is an impressive group of survivors that gives hope for all of us,” emcee Pam Grandstrom said.

“Girls, you’re doing great!”

Dr. Patrick Jewell, director of radiation oncology at OMCC, presented an overview of current radiation technologies and diagnosis and treatment protocols, concluding that for the most part, these technologies are available at the cancer center in Sequim.

Ranay Yarian, who spoke of her cancer journey last year at the tea party, after being diagnosed in 2013, continued to delight the audience with her humorous twists on dealing with cancer.

“Make things fun — I ask, ‘What would Mickey (Mouse) do?’

Yarian also advised, “You don’t have to take on ‘cancer patient’ as your identity. With other people, you become the disease. We have to decide what this journey means to us.”