
My name is Deb Hunt, I live in Oxfordshire with my husband Martin, two teenage children and a horse sized Labradoodle dog named Bailey.
It was on April 1st 2008 that I discovered I was to become one of the 46,000 women in the UK that are diagnosed with breast cancer each year. April 1st , ‘April Fools Day’, a day when jokes are played – unfortunately for me it was no laughing matter! At the age of 43; wife; mother; part-time charity worker; dog walker; taxi service etc etc, juggling life and trying to keep all the balls in the air on a daily basis, as we all do, I decided that I was not going to become a ‘victim’ and that I would tackle this challenge head on.
A mastectomy quickly followed, then 18 weeks of chemotherapy and 5 weeks of daily doses of radiotherapy, with the weekends off for good behaviour!
Black humour got us through and smiling and laughing really was the best medicine. When I went in for my surgery I hung a picture of that famous David Beckham Armani ad on the end of my bed with the strap line ‘only doctors this good looking need stop here!’ It worked like a dream, all the doctors and nurses had a smile on their face as soon as they entered the room and it immediately banished any gloom.
I can’t pretend that the chemotherapy was fun, believe me, having one tit and no hair doesn’t do a lot for a girls confidence! but with the support of wonderful family and friends and more laughter than I have ever had in my life, we made it through. I say ‘we’ because being diagnosed with any sort of cancer doesn’t just affect the individual, it has an impact on all those around you.
So, there you go. Deb Hunt’s top tips for getting through all the bull!
I finished radiotherapy last November and looking back the whole experience now seems to be a bit surreal. As I left the hospital for the last time I suddenly felt as if I had fallen into a vast void. What now? No more routine visits, no more doctors feeling your boobs (oops, sorry I meant boob!), no more monitoring your every move. I needed something to focus on and in a moment of madness decided that I would do something that I would never have considered doing before; a skydive!
Five months later I threw myself out of a plane (strapped to a good looking instructor of course!) and raised £2500 for Breakthrough Breast Cancer, the UK’s top breast cancer charity. It was an amazing experience and made me realise that anything was achievable. I have never felt more alive than during those free-falling seconds before the parachute went up and by the time I had landed on the ground I was a different woman.
The old cliché that ‘life is for living’ is so true. Cancer is a wake up call. With the great research that is taking place, around breast cancer in particular, more women are surviving the disease but having gone through it puts a new perspective on your life. Before breast cancer I was drifting. It has given me a new focus and I am now determined to help in the fight against the disease in the hope that none of my family or friends have to go through what I have been through. Great research doesn’t come without a cost so following the skydive, and a few too many glasses of wine, myself and three great friends decided that we would do something ‘big’ to raise a few more pennies for the cause.
It was a pretty fateful evening that night in the pub, because by the end of it we had decided that we were all up for a massive challenge, something that was way out of our comfort zone, something that would mean that we would have to train hard to be fit to do it and something that would be impressive enough to enable us to raise the target we had set ourselves of £20,000. That challenge is the Kilimanjaro Summit Trek in September 2010! At 5,892metres Kilimanjaro is the highest point in the African continent and the tallest free standing mountain in the world. Now if I could just put things into context, all four of us get out of breath running up the stairs, so you can see we have quite a way to go before we tackle the summit!
This adventure has already completely changed my daily life. We all decided that we would fund the trip ourselves so that all the money raised would go to the charity (Breakthrough Breast Cancer) and have tried to approach the challenge in as business-as-like fashion as possible. We started off by getting ourselves into the local paper and from there we were offered a free fundraising website by a local web-design company, Web-Right of Chipping Norton. Having our own website (www.twin-peaks.co.uk – get the pun, twin peaks!!) has made a tremendous difference and it’s now attracting quite a bit of attention – We even have an American sponsor ; Susan Beausang, the President of 4women.com is going to be supplying us with branded pink ski hats for the trek!
This challenge is also a journey of self development, something that we didn’t anticipate. We have found ourselves giving press and radio interviews, meeting with business executives, learning marketing and PR tricks, all skills that will no doubt help us in the future. It’s also amazingly good fun thinking up different fundraising ideas and innovative ways to get people to part with their money as charities in particular are finding it hard in the present economic climate.
We are producing a cheeky 2010 calendar featuring all local business men; we have called it ‘Chaps for Baps!’ They are advertising their business with a tongue in cheek pose, a cheeky smile and very little else! All the photos are in black and white with a pink bra somewhere in the scene. They have all been very game and I’m sure the calendar will keep people smiling throughout next year! Having the website has enabled us to be able to sell them online (please check it out!) and we are hoping that this will be a good fundraiser towards our total.
So you see, there is life after breast cancer. If I’m being totally honest I think it’s fair to say that there is a better life after breast cancer. I enjoy and appreciate my friends and family much more than I did before (and that was quite a lot!); I try to see the funny side and the positive in everything; I don’t take things for granted, like the beautiful countryside that I live in or a clear blue sky. All these things have new meaning when you become a ‘survivor’. At the end of the day, none of us know how long the Earth will be graced with our unique presence, so let’s make the most of it while we can and make a difference whilst we’re here.
If you would like to help us achieve our mountainous mission please check out our website www.twin-peaks.co.uk
Name: Deb Hunt
Website: http://www.twin-peaks.co.uk
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