An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | Aug. 25, 2009

My wife saved my life

By Mark Allen National Guard Bureau

ARLINGTON, Va. - Walking with my surgeon from the exam room to his office to schedule my impending surgery, I told him it was my wife’s concern about an unsightly mole on my back that sent me to a dermatologist.

The surgeon, Dr. Robert Stone Baxt, wheeled around and impassionedly stated, "Your wife saved your life.”

Here’s the skinny on skin—function, form, beauty, it does it all. Skin is the body’s largest organ. This waterproof barrier breathes, sweats, cools, provides sensation, absorbs vitamins, and is a thing of beauty even though it is often vilified for not being deeper. But, I never knew that.

As children, my brother and I lived the lives of modern-day Tom Sawyers in the Missouri Ozarks. Typically, we wore a pair of jeans everyday—no shoes, no shirt. Little did we know that our skin’s number one enemy--that jolly old Sun--was planting the seeds of destruction that would erupt under my skin with deadly promise.

I had visited a dermatologist for an annual exam every year. After he retired, I was examined by the doctor, who took over his practice, and he did not share the concern that my wife continued to voice.

Finally, I got a referral from my internist for his dermatologist and made an unscheduled visit the next morning. I ambushed Dr. Charles Samorodin outside of his locked office.

Immediately, he said he did not like the looks of my odious mole, and he was going to take a biopsy. "You should thank your wife,” he said as he excised a piece of my back, "for getting you here when she did.”

Subsequently, Dr. Samorodin got the dermatopathologist’s report and asked me to come and see him. He said I had advanced dysplasia, a pre-cancerous condition, and I would have to have surgery to ensure removal of all the tissue that could turn malignant. He recommended a surgeon and I agreed.

Dr. Samorodin is a true patriot. Following medical school, he volunteered for the Army and Vietnam. He served a tour in South Vietnam during 70-71 with the 199th Light Infantry Brigade, and later, in Long Binh. Dr. Samorodin was awarded the Bronze Star for a medical program he initiated that impressed the brass in Saigon.

After leaving active service, he stayed in the Army Reserve providing much needed medical services to our soldiers for a total of 20 years.

My surgeon also turned out to be a Vietnam veteran. He served as a U.S. Navy flight surgeon working helicopter medical-evacuations.

I honor these two patriots for their military service and for the skills of diagnosis and surgery that will truly save my life, but also and especially a wife who looked at my beautiful skin and saw something ugly.

 

 

Related Articles
Tennessee National Guard Soldiers Spc. Johnathan Bradley, Spc. Hannah Cole, Private 1st Class Evan Gore, Spc. Kaitlynn Pope, Spc. Laredo Hixson, and Spc. Joshua Hodges provided immediate medical aid to two victims of a car crash on Interstate 40 near the Appling Farms Road exit in Memphis, Nov. 14. Photo by Spc. Landon Evans.
Off-Duty Tennessee Guard Soldiers Provide Life-Saving Aid
By Tennessee National Guard | Nov. 25, 2025
MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Six Soldiers with the Tennessee Army National Guard who support the Memphis Safe Task Force provided immediate medical aid to two victims of a car crash on Interstate 40 near the Appling Farms Road exit in...

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Nathan Shea, the Unmanned Aircraft Systems operations officer at the Fort Indiantown Gap UAS facility, operates a first-person-view, or FPV, drone on Sept. 2, 2025, at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania. Photo by Brad Rhen.
Taking Flight: Pennsylvania Guard Expanding Drone Usage
By Brad Rhen, | Nov. 24, 2025
FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa. – In a small aircraft hangar on the east end of the post, a makeshift obstacle course has been built primarily from leftover construction material such as wood and polyvinyl chloride, or PVC,...

U.S. Army Soldiers attached to B Company, 422nd Expeditionary Signal Battalion - Expeditionary, pose for a photo with Brig. Gen. D. Rodger Waters (back right), the Adjutant General of the Nevada National Guard at the Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix in Las Vegas, Nevada, Nov. 21, 2025. About 130 Nevada Army and Air National Guard members were activated to enhance emergency response capabilities during the Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix. Photo by Sgt. Adrianne Lopez.
Nevada Guard Completes Third Year of Formula 1 Support
By Sgt. Adrianne Lopez, | Nov. 24, 2025
LAS VEGAS – About 130 Soldiers and Airmen from the Nevada National Guard supported local first responders during the 2025 Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix, held Nov. 20–22 across the Las Vegas Valley. This year marked the third...