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Olly's Journey
by Emily Lygo
[Editor's Note: Emily
Lygo lives in Oxford, UK, with her husband Simon. She is a specialist in
Russian Literature and was teaching at Oxford University when she and her
family received the news that her younger brother Oliver was diagnosed with
stage 4 alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma.]
This story of Olly’s journey with sarcoma is really a tribute
to his bravery. In August 2005 he didn’t really know where he was going with
his life; it turned out that his lot was to be a battle with
rhabdomyosarcoma. He rose to the challenge with such courage he has left us
not only utterly bereft but also inspired.
I can’t say for certain what Olly’s journey with sarcoma was
really like for him, but I can describe how I saw his experience and what he
told me about it. He was diagnosed with Stage 4 Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma in
September 2005; he hadn’t found a tumour, but the level of calcium in his
blood was so high that he felt terribly ill. His kidneys were found to be in
danger of failing and he was admitted to hospital immediately. It was
discovered that the tumour was in his forearm; the cancer had spread to his
bone marrow and was already causing terrible pain and permanent damage to
his ribs and spine.
Like many people with cancer, Olly went through different
moods as he went through the ordeal of treatment. When my family and I look
back on those months now, we can discern stages in Olly’s relationship to
his condition: the low and the turning points; his hope and belief and, at
other times, his loneliness and isolation; how the goal posts and parameters
of what he would and could cope with constantly changed. This is one way of
looking at Olly’s sarcoma journey but I don’t feel these stages and
passages are the most important aspects of Olly’s experience.
I don’t believe that there’s anything positive about getting
cancer. What Olly managed to do was to make the best of a very dreadful
situation. This means that, even in the face of the tragedy of a 25 year old
younger brother and youngest son dying of cancer, we now can find positive
things to remember. It allows us to feel that even the last seven months of
Olly’s life, with all the physical and mental anguish of his situation,
weren’t all bad. Olly’s ability to make the best of things and get on with
his life as best he could defines the contours of the journey he made which
I think is the most important one.
In November Olly and my older brother Tom decided to take a
holiday in La Gomera, in the Canary Islands. Olly had a deep interest in
Natural History and loved wildlife photography; on the island he took
beautiful photographs of dragonflies and other insects as he had done on
many previous travels. In December they went to India with two other friends
and spent a week in the baking hot sun eating curry and seeing the sights.
Olly was a very experienced traveler and knew well how travel is invariably
both exhilarating and exhausting. Although exhausted by chemotherapy and
cancer, Olly still managed to travel to Birmingham at the crack of dawn to
get a visa, and then go on to Manchester for the long flight, and return
just in time to get into the hospital for more treatment the next Monday
morning. In January he went with a friend to Cuba. Sadly, they had to come
back after a couple of days because he was in such excruciating pain, but he
didn’t complain about this – only bemoaned the waste of money and the
horribly expensive flight home. In his situation, with a terrifying
diagnosis and such a lot of pain, I think I would have done exactly what the
doctors wanted. I would have worried about my health, and would have tried
to believe that if only I did everything I was told, I might get the few
months remission the doctors hoped were possible. Olly’s decision was much
braver, more honest, and less compromising. We all knew there were never any
promises that the treatment would work and prolong his life significantly;
he had the extraordinary courage required to acknowledge what that really
meant and he carried on living life as fully as possible. This meant that he
continued to take the rough with the smooth. He would cope with pain when it
was caused by doing something he wanted to do. He just didn’t let the cancer
run his life.
After five cycles of chemotherapy Olly couldn’t take any more
of it and decided to see what would happen if he left it at that. It wasn’t
“enough” – whatever enough means in this situation. But Olly didn’t want to
live his life under the conditions the treatment imposed on him of
depression and feeling desperately ill and weak. It was too much of a
compromise for him.
Olly didn’t want his cancer to run our lives either. We were
all devastated by the situation and found it incredibly difficult to get on
with things in our lives. But every time we spoke to Olly on the phone he
would ask us what we’d been doing. We always knew he’d ask, and knew we had
to have something to tell him or he’d know we’d been miserable about him.
I’m sure this was his way of keeping us going and not letting the cancer
completely take over. A week before Olly died he caught a dangerous
infection and we all rushed to the hospital on a Sunday night. He recovered
well on Monday and immediately started asking me about the job interview I
was due to attend in Sheffield the following day. I had thought about
canceling it, but to do so would have been to let him down and not to be as
strong as he was. I had to go.
In the middle of March Olly and I went to Spain for 5 days.
It was a struggle even to leave England because we had to get his blood
results to see if the counts had started to go up. The doctors seemed not to
want him to go and he had to argue with many medical professionals in order
to find out his results. When we got them they were inconclusive, but in the
end we took the chance and went. In fact the counts weren’t going up. His
haemoglobin was so low he should have been feeling dreadful but he never
once complained. Thank goodness we went, because we snatched the last few
days in which he could walk and we made the best of them, though they
weren’t without tough times. The pain constantly lurked in his lower back
and would at times erupt into agony. We took to smuggling hotel pillows out
in bags when we went to restaurants because the chairs were never
comfortable enough. But, armed with pillows, Olly continued to make the best
of things, even though he was by now having trouble walking any distance and
a worrying numbness had spread through much of his legs and buttocks causing
a whole host of problems. We sat in the sun under orange trees at cafes and
drank good coffee. We traveled from Malaga to a small white village,
Benalmadena, and then onto the stunning town of Ronda which is built on a
cliff edge and spans a dramatic gorge. At a giddying height on the bridge
over the gorge, Olly stood as high as possible on the railings above the
vertical drop and laughed as my knuckles turned white. When we ambled along
the scenic walk that followed the cliff top he climbed onto the wall to get
a better photo of the choughs wheeling in the air below. One leg was not
reliable at all at this point, but he assured me that it was alright as long
as he locked the knee. He still wasn’t making compromises…
At the last stop on our trip, Antequera, Olly revealed to me
that he intended to buy an entire black-trottered jamon Iberico – the
highest quality ham that Spain has to offer made from pigs that feed on the
acorns of the evergreen oaks in Iberia. I was doubtful as to the wisdom of
this idea but did not fuss, and we found out where to buy a good quality
ham. We headed for the butchers after some churros for breakfast on our last
morning in Spain. Olly was walking with difficulty now and we hoped to find
a taxi but there weren’t any around. He said he could make it on foot and so
we set off in the rain that had started falling that day. After each block
we had to stop and rest, and I’m sure Ol was in considerable pain. When we
got to the shop he collapsed in a chair, but was soon absorbed by choosing
his ham. It was enormous, but he carried it back to the hotel. We had to buy
a new bag just to accommodate it, but we got it home to England. Olly’s legs
gave way the day after we returned home and he never walked without crutches
again. Despite this setback, however, he was keen to carve the ham and
almost gave Mum a heart attack as he wielded a huge knife on his unsteady
legs in her kitchen! (I said that was nothing, that she should have been
there when he climbed on the wall over the gorge in Ronda!) The next day he
went into hospital again and stayed in for the last two weeks of his life.
Mum brought him slices of the ham to eat during that time, but there was
still masses left when he died. We ate it ceremoniously at the funeral tea.
My Mum says that if cancer ever hits our family again, we now
know what to do. He has shown us how you deal with it.
V3N3
ESUN Copyright © 2006 Liddy Shriver Sarcoma
Initiative.
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