“”

Women's Health, Your Way

February 24, 2026

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women’s health answers.

GIRLHOOD / When Colon Cancer Hits Closer to Home

When Colon Cancer Hits Closer to Home

When Colon Cancer Hits Closer to Home

They say death comes in threes, but lately it feels less like superstition and more like a pattern I can’t unsee. And the cause, in so many of these losses, is colon cancer. 

First, the headlines linking colon cancer to Catherine O’Hara (RIP, Moira Rose). Then James Van Der Beek — yes, our Dawson, forever standing on that dock in my teenage memory — opening up about his diagnosis before his recent passing. And then the one that truly knocked the wind out of me: my mom’s best friend Nancy, who felt more like an aunt, gone far too soon from the same disease.

I kept asking myself: is this actually happening more, or are we just at the age where it starts touching our own lives?

According to the American Cancer Society's latest report, colorectal cancer rates in adults under 50 have been rising since the mid-1990s. It’s now the leading cause of cancer death in men under 50 and the second leading cause in women in that age group. That’s a staggering shift for something many of us still think of as a “later in life” diagnosis.

Researchers are still untangling why. Diet, ultra-processed foods, sedentary habits, microbiome changes, environmental exposures. Likely a mix. What we do know is practical: screening now starts at 45 for average-risk adults because of this rise. And symptoms matter, even if you feel healthy. Blood in the stool. Ongoing digestive changes. Unexplained weight loss. You are not dramatic for getting it checked out.

Lately, beneath the carpools and grocery runs and half-finished emails, there’s this heightened awareness of how fragile it all is, how ordinary and precious these days can be at the same time.

So yes, plan the trip, celebrate the birthday, stay up too late with your friends, and order the good bottle of wine. But also call your doctor, know your family history, and schedule the screening you’ve been putting off.

Two things can be true at once: life is precious and unpredictable, and protecting it is part of loving it.

More from GIRLHOOD

They say some people eat to live, and others live to eat. As a second-generation Italian-American girl from Queens, I have always, proudly, lived to eat. Food is how we say... Read more
I did not have “Bridgerton teaches us about the pleasure gap” on my 2026 bingo card, and yet… here we are. Just when we’d all quietly filed Francesca away as... Read more

Are We Done… or Just Tired?

People don’t talk enough about how hard it is to know you’re “done” having kids after years of infertility. Mostly because “done” implies a level of certainty that infertility never... Read more

Is Fiber the New Protein?

If 2025 was peak protein, I was fully on board. I tracked it, prioritized it, and mentally calculated grams while ordering lunch. For a while, it felt empowering, like we... Read more
I am not, and never have been, a haircare girly. I didn’t grow up knowing the difference between a mask and a conditioner. I’ve never instinctively understood which shampoo was... Read more
Like everyone else at the peak of COVID, my husband and I bought a Peloton bike with the purest of intentions. We’d ride every day from the comfort of our... Read more
I’ve spent more time than I care to admit staring at patient portals, waiting for test results to populate. Fertility labs. Hormone panels. Bloodwork that’s supposed to explain why something... Read more
The best thing that happened to me this most recent postpartum wasn’t a supplement, a system, or a “game-changing” routine I would later forget to keep up with. It was... Read more
On Rescripted’s weekly standup this morning, we acknowledged what everyone’s been feeling: things are heavy right now. With everything happening in Minnesota, layered on top of the general state of... Read more
As someone who has spent the better part of the past 22 days away from social media (thank you, Opal app), I picked a truly chaotic week to check back in. I opened... Read more