Get your rear in Gear at T&T Underground!
Get your Rear in Gear with T&T Underground from the comfort of your couch!
Get your rear in Gear at T&T Underground! We are coming together with Belle Toi Salon & Spa and Imani Cafe to raise awareness for Colorectal Cancer!
Ready to put your money where it matters? Come in to T&T to purchase a Blue Drink! T&T Underground will donate $1.00 for every drink purchased through the month of March. 🧿💙 100% of your donation will be given to Wyandot Memoral Hospital Oncology Dept, and you may give as much as you'd like! Thank you for donation and your support in our fight to raise awareness. Get Screened today and Save your life!
March 20th is Get your Rear in Gear night at the Underground! We hope to see you there.
Read Christa's Story: I’m Still Here: My Fight Against Colorectal Cancer
By Christa Messmer
Before cancer had a name in my life, I was just me — a woman juggling dreams, family,
and the never-ending list of things that make up a full, busy life. I wasn’t thinking about
hospitals or lab results or how fragile the body could be. I was thinking about living —
building something meaningful and beautiful.
In April 2023, I bought Belle Toi Salon and Spa Studio — my dream come true. Belle Toi
means “Beautiful You” in French, and that’s exactly what I wanted it to represent. Not
just manicures and haircuts, but transformation — a place where people could walk in
heavy and leave lighter, renewed, and seen. I poured every ounce of myself into it —
my hands, my heart, and my faith.
Life was full. My husband, Keith, was my steady rock; my daughter, Justine, was finding
her own path. I was 47, healthy, and full of plans. Cancer wasn’t even a thought.
Then one ordinary day, during a routine checkup, my OBGYN noticed I hadn’t had a
colonoscopy. I laughed and said, “Don’t make me older than I am! I’m only forty-seven.”
She smiled and said, “The guidelines changed — it’s forty-five now. I want you to walk
across the hall today and schedule it.”
So, I did. Not because I thought it mattered, but because she told me to. That short walk
— one small, obedient step — saved my life.
A week later, I woke up from my colonoscopy expecting to hear “all clear.” Instead, my
doctor’s eyes told a different story. “We found a mass,” he said gently. “We believe it’s
cancer.” Time froze. The words colorectal cancer didn’t feel real. I was healthy, strong, living my
dream. When I told Keith, I could see the fear in his eyes even as he tried to stay
strong. “I’ve got a fifty-fifty chance,” I said. “And I’m going to beat this.”
That night, I whispered to God, “Please don’t let this be the end. Not like this.” And
somewhere deep down, a quiet voice reminded me: This isn’t the end of your story.
When you hear the word “cancer,” the world tilts. Every heartbeat feels uncertain. I
wanted to fight — I just didn’t know how yet. The doctors had a plan: chemo, radiation,
surgery if needed. But before that, fear pushed me into frantic research — special diets,
supplements, miracle cures. Desperation can disguise itself as determination. I tried
things I shouldn’t have. Eventually, I realized the real strength wasn’t in chasing control
— it was in trusting God and my medical team.
January 2024 marked the beginning of treatment: six pills a day, twenty-eight rounds of
radiation, and months of chemotherapy. By day ten, my body was screaming. By day
twenty-eight, sitting was agony. My skin burned, my energy vanished. But I still showed
up to Belle Toi. Pretending to be okay was sometimes the only power I had left.
On May 22, 2024, my nurse smiled and said, “That’s your last one.” She asked if I
wanted to ring the bell. “Not yet,” I said. “I want to make sure the beast is gone.” Later, I
cried — not from joy, but from sheer relief. I survived the treatment. Now I had to survive
the aftermath.
There’s something surreal about planning your own funeral while you’re still alive. I met
with my funeral director, calmly discussed cremation, flowers, and music. It wasn’t
surrender — it was reclaiming control. Facing death helped me decide how I wanted to
live. I sat in my car afterward, and sunlight warmed my face, and thought, If I’m still
breathing, I’m still fighting. If I’m still here, I’m still here.
The hardest part of cancer isn’t always the pain. It’s the mirror. I built a career around
beauty, helping others feel radiant. Now my reflection looked foreign — thinning hair,
pale skin, hollow eyes. I began wearing scarves and makeup I called “war paint.” Some days, I didn’t recognize myself. Other days, I saw something new — a woman who had
been broken and rebuilt.
Belle Toi — Beautiful You — took on a new meaning. Beauty wasn’t about perfection
anymore. It was about surviving. One morning, I looked in the mirror and whispered,
“You’re still beautiful — because you’re still here.”
By mid-2025, strength began to return. My hair grew back in soft waves. My laughter —
real laughter — came back. My faith deepened. Test results showed stability. No
surgery. No spread. I was scarred, changed, but still here.
In the fall of 2024, after twenty years of saying “no,” I finally joined Keith on his beloved
deer hunt. At 5 a.m., we climbed into a blind under a cold sky. At 7:58, a 9-point buck
appeared — my first hunt, my first deer, my first time truly feeling alive again. The world
was quiet, sacred. Nature healed me in ways medicine never could.
Cancer took a lot from me — but it did not take me. I am softer, stronger, more grateful.
I’ve learned who truly loves me and who I am without everything I thought I needed. I
have looked death in the eye and still chosen life. I’m still here. And as I hold on to this promise, I whisper it every day:
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord,
“plans to prosper you and not to harm you,
plans to give you hope and a future.” — Jeremiah 29:11
Get your Rear in Gear with T&T Underground from the comfort of your couch!
Get your rear in Gear at T&T Underground! We are coming together with Belle Toi Salon & Spa and Imani Cafe to raise awareness for Colorectal Cancer!
Ready to put your money where it matters? Come in to T&T to purchase a Blue Drink! T&T Underground will donate $1.00 for every drink purchased through the month of March. 🧿💙 100% of your donation will be given to Wyandot Memoral Hospital Oncology Dept, and you may give as much as you'd like! Thank you for donation and your support in our fight to raise awareness. Get Screened today and Save your life!
March 20th is Get your Rear in Gear night at the Underground! We hope to see you there.
Read Christa's Story: I’m Still Here: My Fight Against Colorectal Cancer
By Christa Messmer
Before cancer had a name in my life, I was just me — a woman juggling dreams, family,
and the never-ending list of things that make up a full, busy life. I wasn’t thinking about
hospitals or lab results or how fragile the body could be. I was thinking about living —
building something meaningful and beautiful.
In April 2023, I bought Belle Toi Salon and Spa Studio — my dream come true. Belle Toi
means “Beautiful You” in French, and that’s exactly what I wanted it to represent. Not
just manicures and haircuts, but transformation — a place where people could walk in
heavy and leave lighter, renewed, and seen. I poured every ounce of myself into it —
my hands, my heart, and my faith.
Life was full. My husband, Keith, was my steady rock; my daughter, Justine, was finding
her own path. I was 47, healthy, and full of plans. Cancer wasn’t even a thought.
Then one ordinary day, during a routine checkup, my OBGYN noticed I hadn’t had a
colonoscopy. I laughed and said, “Don’t make me older than I am! I’m only forty-seven.”
She smiled and said, “The guidelines changed — it’s forty-five now. I want you to walk
across the hall today and schedule it.”
So, I did. Not because I thought it mattered, but because she told me to. That short walk
— one small, obedient step — saved my life.
A week later, I woke up from my colonoscopy expecting to hear “all clear.” Instead, my
doctor’s eyes told a different story. “We found a mass,” he said gently. “We believe it’s
cancer.” Time froze. The words colorectal cancer didn’t feel real. I was healthy, strong, living my
dream. When I told Keith, I could see the fear in his eyes even as he tried to stay
strong. “I’ve got a fifty-fifty chance,” I said. “And I’m going to beat this.”
That night, I whispered to God, “Please don’t let this be the end. Not like this.” And
somewhere deep down, a quiet voice reminded me: This isn’t the end of your story.
When you hear the word “cancer,” the world tilts. Every heartbeat feels uncertain. I
wanted to fight — I just didn’t know how yet. The doctors had a plan: chemo, radiation,
surgery if needed. But before that, fear pushed me into frantic research — special diets,
supplements, miracle cures. Desperation can disguise itself as determination. I tried
things I shouldn’t have. Eventually, I realized the real strength wasn’t in chasing control
— it was in trusting God and my medical team.
January 2024 marked the beginning of treatment: six pills a day, twenty-eight rounds of
radiation, and months of chemotherapy. By day ten, my body was screaming. By day
twenty-eight, sitting was agony. My skin burned, my energy vanished. But I still showed
up to Belle Toi. Pretending to be okay was sometimes the only power I had left.
On May 22, 2024, my nurse smiled and said, “That’s your last one.” She asked if I
wanted to ring the bell. “Not yet,” I said. “I want to make sure the beast is gone.” Later, I
cried — not from joy, but from sheer relief. I survived the treatment. Now I had to survive
the aftermath.
There’s something surreal about planning your own funeral while you’re still alive. I met
with my funeral director, calmly discussed cremation, flowers, and music. It wasn’t
surrender — it was reclaiming control. Facing death helped me decide how I wanted to
live. I sat in my car afterward, and sunlight warmed my face, and thought, If I’m still
breathing, I’m still fighting. If I’m still here, I’m still here.
The hardest part of cancer isn’t always the pain. It’s the mirror. I built a career around
beauty, helping others feel radiant. Now my reflection looked foreign — thinning hair,
pale skin, hollow eyes. I began wearing scarves and makeup I called “war paint.” Some days, I didn’t recognize myself. Other days, I saw something new — a woman who had
been broken and rebuilt.
Belle Toi — Beautiful You — took on a new meaning. Beauty wasn’t about perfection
anymore. It was about surviving. One morning, I looked in the mirror and whispered,
“You’re still beautiful — because you’re still here.”
By mid-2025, strength began to return. My hair grew back in soft waves. My laughter —
real laughter — came back. My faith deepened. Test results showed stability. No
surgery. No spread. I was scarred, changed, but still here.
In the fall of 2024, after twenty years of saying “no,” I finally joined Keith on his beloved
deer hunt. At 5 a.m., we climbed into a blind under a cold sky. At 7:58, a 9-point buck
appeared — my first hunt, my first deer, my first time truly feeling alive again. The world
was quiet, sacred. Nature healed me in ways medicine never could.
Cancer took a lot from me — but it did not take me. I am softer, stronger, more grateful.
I’ve learned who truly loves me and who I am without everything I thought I needed. I
have looked death in the eye and still chosen life. I’m still here. And as I hold on to this promise, I whisper it every day:
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord,
“plans to prosper you and not to harm you,
plans to give you hope and a future.” — Jeremiah 29:11
Good to know
Highlights
- under 21 with parent or legal guardian
- In person
- Doors at 3PM
Refund Policy
Location
111 N Sandusky Ave
111 North Sandusky Avenue
Upper Sandusky, OH 43351
How do you want to get there?
