Breast cancer survivor
wins right to swim topless in Seattle
Laura Myers
Reuters
SEATTLE—A woman who
survived a double mastectomy and says wearing a bathing suit covering her chest
causes searing pain has won a battle to swim topless at Seattle’s public pools.
Jodi Jaecks, a
47-year-old fitness buff who had surgery to remove both breasts last year to
treat cancer, was initially denied permission this year to swim topless by
staff at Seattle’s Medgar Evers pool.
According to city
spokesperson Dewey Potter, a sign at the pool stated, “This is a family
recreation facility. Please dress and act accordingly.” Other city employees at
the pool blamed an unwritten city policy that required “gender-appropriate”
bathing suits, Jaecks told Reuters.
But acting Seattle
Parks and Recreation Superintendent Christopher Williams told her on Wednesday
that due to her physical therapy, she would be granted a narrow exception to
swim topless at all public pools during adult lap swims.
Jaecks, whose
self-described “androgynous” thin physique now resembles that of a young man’s,
said that swimming in a bathing suit covering her chest, left with two thin
scars and no nipples following surgery, caused searing pain.
“I had a lot of chest
pains and I was told that the feeling of warm water on the pain would be
cathartic,” said Jaecks, who finished chemotherapy in November and is now
cancer-free.
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