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On Dec. 2, 2015, Erin Burnett was two days out from her wedding and existing in the buzzy state of bliss that's reserved for people who are very much in love. That morning, as she was happily daydreaming in the shower, she noticed something was different about her left nipple.

She took a closer look — it seemed to be inverted. She felt an immediate chill; the sudsy water suddenly felt like ice. She called her doctor, who said Burnett could come in during her lunch break to get her breast checked out, just as a precaution.



After some testing, the doctor told Burnett to come back after her wedding day. She tried to put the experience out of her mind until after the ceremony. Just 12 days after tying the knot, at 28 years old, Burnett got the call.

She had stage II, triple-positive, invasive ductal carcinoma. Her honeymoon would be cut short. The diagnosis impacted Burnett's life in myriad ways — but a major factor was the impact on her sex life.

"I had a brand-new marriage, with no honeymoon phase," she remembers. "I used to joke around with my friends and say: 'You guys are having these crazy sex lives where someone pulls your hair, while my husband's picking my hair up off the ground.'" Burnett underwent a double mastectomy and a hysterectomy, which induced what's known as medical menopause .

"I didn't know until it happened that I was gonna have vaginal atrophy, vaginal dryness, pain with intercourse, lack of lubrication, and lack of libido [following the hysterectomy],".

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