close
SM-Stamp-Join-1
  • Selfish Mother is the most brilliant blogging platform. Join here for free & you can post a blog within minutes. We don't edit or approve your words before they go live - it's up to you. And, with our cool new 'squares' design - you can share your blog to Instagram, too. What are you waiting for? Come join in! We can't wait to read what YOU have to say...

  • Your basic information

  • Your account information

View as: GRID LIST

Bowel Cancer At 37 Is Something To Shout About

1
The weekend before my first chemo session my husband whisked me away on a surprise spa break. It was meant to be a relaxing, let’s-forget-about-all-that-cancer-crap for 24 hours… Alas, cancer’s shadow cast long and dark over even the most lightly scented of spa treatment rooms. I was asked to fill out a health questionnaire, you see. It’s a standard procedure. I’ve completed my fair share over the years but up until that point I’d never had to tick the first box in the ‘have you ever had any of the following conditions’ section
SelfishMother.com
2
before.

As I handed my completed questionnaire back to my masseuse I found myself blushing and apologising. Apologising for that one solitary tick. For having cancer at an age when it’s more likely for me to be hit by a bus or to disappear somewhere over the Atlantic in a blaze of burning debris.

We exist though. We few, we unhappy few, we band of chemo brothers (to misquote Shakespeare). We’re all in our 20s, 30s and 40s and we’re generally found clumped together in a cancer group that people find hardest to accept. Perhaps our diagnoses are

SelfishMother.com
3
a little too close for comfort? After all, we’re the neighbours, the best friends, the mums at the school gate at 3pm. Tripped up in our prime, we have so much to live for and everything to lose.

I hear the slight pause on the line when I call my chemo unit and the nurse requests my date of birth to access my records. I see the raised eyebrow on my GP’s face when I enter his room to ask for another prescription for anti-sickness tablets. He was told to expect a bowel cancer patient but I don’t fit the profile. I have no grey hairs other than

SelfishMother.com
4
those bequeathed to me by my deliciously truculent four year old.

I make people panic. I can see their thoughts scatter like frightened rabbits when I tell them about my diagnosis. I’m asked to repeat my symptoms again and again as they silently compare and contrast them to their own lingering health ailments.

Young adults are health anxiety addicts. We’re internet savvy, we scour the sites for similar symptoms, yet we’re secretly cosseted by our age. I see anxious, undiagnosed people time and time again on cancer forums, ones that are

SelfishMother.com
5
worried enough to Google their symptoms but not worried enough to push for a colonoscopy. It’s almost like they’re unwilling to accept that something terrible might actually be wrong with them because statistics have told them it’s ok.

Statistics are not individuals. I learnt that the hard way the day after my Stage 3 diagnosis. To quote someone from another cancer forum recently, “the first rule of advanced bowel cancer survival is don’t Google advanced bowel cancer survival.” I’m fit and healthy, or so I thought. I have two children

SelfishMother.com
6
under 6. I shouldn’t have bowel cancer but I do.

And I’m not alone. 2500 young adults are diagnosed with bowel cancer every year. 2500 men and women under 50. Young adults with young children like myself, or those that are facing an agonising choice between survival or starting a family.

Never Too Young is the latest Bowel Cancer UK campaign and I want to shout it from the rooftops. Time and time again I hear stories similar to my own, of a year long wait for hospital referrals. Of colonoscopy delays. Scotland have recently lowered the bowel

SelfishMother.com
7
cancer screening programme age from 60 to 50. It’s a start but it’s no help to someone like me, a 37-year-old Englishwoman who suffered unexplained bleeding and a prolonged change in bowel habits for six months. And no it wasn’t piles, GPs 1 to 6, the ones who summarily dismissed me before I finally lost my patience and paid to see a private consultant.

It doesn’t help that bowel cancer is somehow seen as mean and dirty. It’s the cancer that no one really wants to talk about, an embarrassing uncle that you don’t invite at Christmas for

SelfishMother.com
8
fear of upsetting that delicate dinner table equilibrium, yet it’s the UK’s second biggest cancer killer. Young adults need to be more aware of their susceptibility to this disease. It’s on the rise in our peer group and no one seems to know why.

Chances are you don’t have bowel cancer but wouldn’t you rather know? Caught early and you’re looking at a complete cure. Caught later and the odds for survival start tumbling. To prevent that I’m willing to be your comfort blanket. I’ll repeat my symptoms over and over again to anyone who

SelfishMother.com
9
wants to listen if it means that fewer young adults are diagnosed late. Please don’t be embarrassed. Visit your and GP and keep returning if needs be. It might be the most important call you ever make.

xx

SelfishMother.com

By

This blog was originally posted on SelfishMother.com - why not sign up & share what's on your mind, too?

Why not write for Selfish Mother, too? You can sign up for free and post immediately.


We regularly share posts on @SelfishMother Instagram and Facebook :)

- 21 Sep 17

The weekend before my first chemo session my husband whisked me away on a surprise spa break. It was meant to be a relaxing, let’s-forget-about-all-that-cancer-crap for 24 hours… Alas, cancer’s shadow cast long and dark over even the most lightly scented of spa treatment rooms. I was asked to fill out a health questionnaire, you see. It’s a standard procedure. I’ve completed my fair share over the years but up until that point I’d never had to tick the first box in the ‘have you ever had any of the following conditions’ section before.

As I handed my completed questionnaire back to my masseuse I found myself blushing and apologising. Apologising for that one solitary tick. For having cancer at an age when it’s more likely for me to be hit by a bus or to disappear somewhere over the Atlantic in a blaze of burning debris.

We exist though. We few, we unhappy few, we band of chemo brothers (to misquote Shakespeare). We’re all in our 20s, 30s and 40s and we’re generally found clumped together in a cancer group that people find hardest to accept. Perhaps our diagnoses are a little too close for comfort? After all, we’re the neighbours, the best friends, the mums at the school gate at 3pm. Tripped up in our prime, we have so much to live for and everything to lose.

I hear the slight pause on the line when I call my chemo unit and the nurse requests my date of birth to access my records. I see the raised eyebrow on my GP’s face when I enter his room to ask for another prescription for anti-sickness tablets. He was told to expect a bowel cancer patient but I don’t fit the profile. I have no grey hairs other than those bequeathed to me by my deliciously truculent four year old.

I make people panic. I can see their thoughts scatter like frightened rabbits when I tell them about my diagnosis. I’m asked to repeat my symptoms again and again as they silently compare and contrast them to their own lingering health ailments.

Young adults are health anxiety addicts. We’re internet savvy, we scour the sites for similar symptoms, yet we’re secretly cosseted by our age. I see anxious, undiagnosed people time and time again on cancer forums, ones that are worried enough to Google their symptoms but not worried enough to push for a colonoscopy. It’s almost like they’re unwilling to accept that something terrible might actually be wrong with them because statistics have told them it’s ok.

Statistics are not individuals. I learnt that the hard way the day after my Stage 3 diagnosis. To quote someone from another cancer forum recently, “the first rule of advanced bowel cancer survival is don’t Google advanced bowel cancer survival.” I’m fit and healthy, or so I thought. I have two children under 6. I shouldn’t have bowel cancer but I do.

And I’m not alone. 2500 young adults are diagnosed with bowel cancer every year. 2500 men and women under 50. Young adults with young children like myself, or those that are facing an agonising choice between survival or starting a family.

Never Too Young is the latest Bowel Cancer UK campaign and I want to shout it from the rooftops. Time and time again I hear stories similar to my own, of a year long wait for hospital referrals. Of colonoscopy delays. Scotland have recently lowered the bowel cancer screening programme age from 60 to 50. It’s a start but it’s no help to someone like me, a 37-year-old Englishwoman who suffered unexplained bleeding and a prolonged change in bowel habits for six months. And no it wasn’t piles, GPs 1 to 6, the ones who summarily dismissed me before I finally lost my patience and paid to see a private consultant.

It doesn’t help that bowel cancer is somehow seen as mean and dirty. It’s the cancer that no one really wants to talk about, an embarrassing uncle that you don’t invite at Christmas for fear of upsetting that delicate dinner table equilibrium, yet it’s the UK’s second biggest cancer killer. Young adults need to be more aware of their susceptibility to this disease. It’s on the rise in our peer group and no one seems to know why.

Chances are you don’t have bowel cancer but wouldn’t you rather know? Caught early and you’re looking at a complete cure. Caught later and the odds for survival start tumbling. To prevent that I’m willing to be your comfort blanket. I’ll repeat my symptoms over and over again to anyone who wants to listen if it means that fewer young adults are diagnosed late. Please don’t be embarrassed. Visit your and GP and keep returning if needs be. It might be the most important call you ever make.

xx

Did you enjoy this post? If so please support the writer: like, share and comment!


Why not join the SM CLUB, too? You can share posts & events immediately. It's free!

Catherine is a former TV Producer who writes romance books and blogs about the realities of modern family life. Catherine was diagnosed with stage 3 bowel cancer earlier this year. Since then she's been helping to raise awareness in the importance of an early diagnosis for this type of cancer, especially in young women.

Post Tags


Keep up to date with Selfish Mother — Sign up for our newsletter and follow us on social media