Kari Dziedzic's surprise selection to lead the Senate DFL caucus shortly after the November election has been overshadowed by what came next for the otherwise healthy 60-year-old from northeast Minneapolis: Ovarian cancer.
During a routine physical in December, Dziedzic's Pap smear came back abnormal. She went to an oncologist, whose findings were inconclusive, she said. Then came an MRI which showed a tumor in her pelvis.
Her private cancer journey paralleled her public ascension. As she was prepping in December for her first legislative session as majority leader, she was visiting a succession of doctors in search of a diagnosis.
When the doctor eventually informed her that she needed surgery, Dziedzic said she responded, "This is really not good timing."
Delay wasn't an option. On March 13, she underwent surgery that started as a less invasive laparoscopy but led to doctors cutting open her abdomen. By the time it was over more than five hours later, she'd had a full hysterectomy and her spleen and appendix had been removed, the senator said.
She has been recuperating at home since the second week in March and doesn't know when or if she will be cleared to physically return to the Senate offices this session, which has a May 22 deadline to adjourn.
"I would much rather be at the Capitol than sitting here, definitely," she said in a recent telephone interview with the Star Tribune from her home.
Her written public release of the diagnosis came as a jolt late on March 14. Throughout the previous week, Dziedzic had been on the Senate floor, betraying no signs of illness.