Become a Member
The Jewish Chronicle

How I kept calm to defy the odds and beat cancer

When Alex Samuels was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer on erev Rosh Hashanah he was forced to postpone his final year at Leeds University. Friends quickly rallied to support him: UJS president Dan Grabiner travelled to London to decorate his hospital room, Leeds JSoc organised a 'saliva drive' encouraging students to join the bone marrow donors' register, and tutors offered advice and assistance. Alex, 22, describes how his campus support network helped him defeat the disease and take his first steps to recovery:

April 5, 2012 12:50
Keep smiling: Alex (far right) with friends

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

2 min read

I had been ill since returning home from my year abroad in Berlin and I had undergone countless blood tests, three skin biopsies, a fine needle biopsy, three operations, possible tuberculosis, a diagnosis of rare auto-immune disease Dermatomyositis, two MRI scans, a muscle specific MRI, three CT scans, an ultra-sound, three steroid infusions, hundreds of pills and creams and seen 10 consultants for innumerable appointments.

Despite all this I had returned to Leeds to complete the final year of my degree, but hadn't even unpacked when my parents called and told me to get the next train home - the doctor had news.

We drove straight to the hospital. My consultant called us in. There was a long, awkward silence - I think we all knew what was coming, but nothing could have prepared me for what she was going to say: "You have cancer."

The tears and emotions which followed were unlike anything I'd ever experienced. Nothing could have equipped me psychologically for those three words. All the negative connotations associated with cancer were dancing around my mind. The consultant kept talking, but nothing was really going in.