Taylor Swift's Mom's Cancer Battles
- Iconic singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, 34, and mom Andrea Swift, 66, enjoyed a fun night out over the weekend after the Kansas City Chiefs, the team Taylor’s boyfriend Travis Kelce is on, won the Super Bowl. Footage of the pop megastar shared from their celebratory night out is incredible meaning ful as Andrea, a two-time breast cancer survivor, has overcome adversity and understands all too well the importance of milestones.
- Her 65-year-old mom Andrea Swift is a two-time breast cancer survivor following both a 2015 and 2019 diagnosis.
- In January 2020, the singer revealed her mother was battling a brain tumor that was found amid chemotherapy treatments.
- Taylor dedicated several songs to her mom in the wake of her cancer diagnosis. People like Taylor Swift’s mom can feel a wide range of emotions when confronted with a cancer diagnosis. Many may feel depressed, anxious, worried, overwhelmed, and even full of grief. Support your loved one as best you can by being a loving, listening ear and lending support.
- Dr. Scott Irwin, director of supportive care service at Cedars-Sinai, explains in an earlier interview the grief that may accompany a cancer diagnosis. “Grief comes in waves.” he says. “It often gets better over time, but at certain days, it can look like depression. And other days, people look perfectly normal and can function.”
The amount of joy Andrea must feel during this exhilarating time is certainly imaginable, these life milestones certainly have more meaning as she’s a two-time breast cancer survivor following both a 2015 and 2019 diagnosis. She even battled a brain tumor after it was discovered amid chemotherapy treatments.
Read More@taylorswift accidentally going clubbing with your parents is something everyone should try at least once in their life ♬ original sound – Taylor Swift
Taylor has been in a relationship, since mid-2023, with the American football tight end Kelce and has been exceedingly supportive, along with her mom, to her sports star boyfriend on his journey to winning the Super Bowl.
Andrea was spotted with her 71-year-old husband and Taylor’s dad, Scott Kingsley Swift, on a night out with Taylor in Vegas to commemorate the Chiefs’ Super Bowl success.
Taylor took to TikTok amid the Super Bowl celebrations to share a video clip of her parents and boyfriend enjoying a night out in a club.
She captioned the post, “Accidentally going clubbing with your parents is something everyone should try at least once in their life.”
With the song “What’s Your Fantasy” by Ludacris playing in the background, the video scans the crowded room, filled with people dancing and having fun, revealing her parents sitting in what appears to be a VIP area. The looks on her parents faces is comical as the music plays and partying takes place around them.
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In overlay text on the video, Swift writes, “It’s a family party they said. Bring your parents they said.”
Despite the wild party that was taking place, with red lights flashing around the room, her parents looked overwhelmed with joy to be enjoying the night out with Taylor and Kelce, among many others.
In an early clip shared on a Instagram fan page for Taylor’s fans, called @swiftiesforeternity, Taylor’s mom was also seen walking into the Super Bowl in style, wearing a red scarf and a red Valentino purse.
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Andrea Swift’s Battles with Cancer
Andrea Swift is a two-time breast cancer survivor following her first diagnosis in 2015 and then again in 2019. She also dealt with a brain tumor doctors discovered while she was undergoing chemotherapy.
After sharing her mom’s diagnosis on social media with her fans, Taylor noted that her mom “may not be at as many shows” to focus on her cancer treatment, entertainment media outlet Distractify reports.
“The symptoms of what a person goes through when they have a brain tumor is nothing like what we’ve ever been through with her cancer before. So it’s just been a really hard time for us as a family,” Taylor Swift previously told Variety.
The specifics about Andrea’s breast cancer and the status of her ongoing treatment remain unknown, but one thing is for sure — she’s living life to the fullest amid her daughter’s eventful life.
Although the “Anti-Hero” singer hasn’t revealed explicit details about her mom’s diagnosis, it’s important to understand that metastatic breast cancer often presents as a recurrence of a prior early-stage breast cancer, although it can be a new diagnosis.
Back in 2015, the year Andrea was first diagnosed with breast cancer, Taylor’s mom presented her daughter with The Milestone Award at The Academy of Country Music Awards.
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“I’ve watched this milestone artist from the time she was a tangled hair little girl growing up on our farm, full of imagination and creativity,” Andrea told the crowd at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, in what was her first public appearance since her cancer diagnosis. “And ever since then, her favorite thing in the world to do has been to write a song, tell a story, play a guitar, or a piano,” Andrea said. “And I’ve seen those things carry her through every emotion, every experience in her life. Good or bad.”
She continued, “Every once in a while, her dad or I find ourselves to be the subject of those songs. Sometimes we’re merely the inspiration. Like the time she was 17 years old and her dad and I strongly disapproved of a young man, and rightfully so. But she was mad, she was real mad, and she went to her room and she closed the door. She came out about an hour later with a song called ‘Love Story.'”
RELATED: Taylor Swift Honors Her Parents in Amazing Speech as Her Mom Deals with Cancer Recurrence
Taylor’s parents have been incredibly influential in her success and she doesn’t shy away from giving her mom credit whenever possible. During her mom’s breast cancer battle, Taylor wrote a song dedicated to her mom called “The Best Day.” The lyrics include the notable line, “…And I love you for giving me your eyes. Staying back and watching me shine…”
Another song dedicated to Andrea includes, “Soon You’ll Get Better.”
Taylor told a crowd at the Global Citizen’s “One World, Together at Home” concert in 2020, “That’s a song I don’t know if I’ll ever play it live. It’s just really difficult for me. It was hard to write. It’s hard to sing. It’s hard to listen to for me,” CNN reported.
Breast Cancer Spreading to Other Areas
Fans are unaware of the exact details of Andrea’s case, but there are instances in which breast cancer can spread to the brain or other areas of the body something known as a “metastatic brain tumor.”
Metastatic Breast Cancer: You Are Not a Statistic
Reaching Milestones as a Cancer Survivor
Reaching milestones during or after a cancer battle is huge. These events – like getting married, turning another year older, or celebrating a Super Bowl win with your daughter and her significant other, may mean even more than they did previously, so it’s important to take them all in and celebrate all that you’ve overcome.
“I’m Able to Be Here For More Milestones” – One Cancer Survivor’s Incredible Story
Chrissy Degennaro, a cancer warrior determined to keep enjoying these precious milestones, is a great example of this. She has been battling a rare blood cancer called multiple myeloma for 14 years, and was first diagnosed when she was just 36 years old with a 2-year-old son.
When she was diagnosed, she almost expected to not be able to see him enter kindergarten. But thanks to 27 rounds of chemotherapy, two stem cell transplants, a CAR-T cell trial and two CAR-T cell transplants over following 14 years, she’s able to keep making memories with her family.
“You know, I do live one day at a time,” Chrissy previously told SurvivorNet. “Now, maybe I can go a week, a month, but things are looking pretty good. I’m able to be here for more milestones for my son, for more holidays, more birthdays. I do feel like I have had another chance at life.”
RELATED: I Got to Dance With My Daughter at Her Wedding: Steve Silverstein’s Cancer Story
Supporting a Family Member Through Cancer
People like Taylor Swift’s mom can feel a wide range of emotions when confronted with a cancer diagnosis. Many may feel depressed, anxious, worried, overwhelmed, and even full of grief. Support your loved one as best you can by being a loving, listening ear and lending support.
Dealing With Grief After a Cancer Diagnosis
Dr. Scott Irwin, director of supportive care service at Cedars-Sinai, explains in an earlier interview the grief that may accompany a cancer diagnosis. “Grief comes in waves,” he says. “It often gets better over time, but at certain days, it can look like depression. And other days, people look perfectly normal and can function.”
“They’re grieving the change in their life, the future they had imagined is now different,” says Dr. Irwin, of how a person may feel after getting a cancer diagnosis.
“In cancer care, sometimes, we’re actually forcing some body changes that are beyond what would be normal aging, and that can be even harder for people to deal with where they don’t feel like themselves.”
Family Love and Support Makes a World of Difference During Cancer Treatment
Contributing: SurvivorNet Staff
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