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Glamorous Mom And Company Director ‘Who Has It All’ Reveals How Cancer Taught Her Humility
A gorgeous Mom and company director, who ‘has it all,’ has released photos to highlight the harsh reality of living with cancer.
An image shows mother-of-two Ruth Naylor, 32, slumped in bed with a bucket while another reveals how she’s holding her head in her hands while enduring chemotherapy.
Naylor, from Hale, Greater Manchester, UK, was diagnosed with a rare form of Hodgkin lymphoma – cancer of the lymphatic system – in August of this year.
She said: ‘On paper, I have it all. A beautiful home we built ourselves, two gorgeous children and a brilliant career.
‘When I’m in my hospital gown, I’m no different to anyone else. Just another woman desperate not to die.
‘I think we’re obsessed with portraying a perfect persona, but cancer really teaches you humility.’
She is now five weeks into her chemotherapy and has an unclear prognosis.
The glamorous Mom is now documenting her cancer battle on Instagram, in a bid to help other sufferers.
‘Dying is not an option for me’
Naylor said: ‘I didn’t want to have the same conversation hundreds of times, so I posted an update on my Instagram and the response from my friends has been unreal,’ .
‘Most of my friends and family have been angry on my behalf, but I think I can’t start thinking, “Why me?” Instead, it’s more a case of, “Why not me?”
‘One in two of us will get cancer at some stage in our lives and someone has got to be that one.’
‘On paper, I have it all. A beautiful home we built ourselves, two gorgeous children and a brilliant career.
She said: ‘But, after a cancer diagnosis, instantly, you are faced with losing everything and your perspective of everything changes.
‘I think we’re obsessed with portraying a perfect persona, but cancer really teaches you humility.
‘When I’m in my hospital gown, I’m no different to anyone else. Just another woman desperate not to die..
‘When I’m in bed at night and the house is quiet, I can’t help wondering how it will all end.
She said: ‘I ask myself, “What if I don’t wake up in the morning and the children are left without a mum?”
‘But dying is not an option for me. Throughout this process I have been as mentally strong as I can be, and I really hope that helps get me though.’
In addition to teaching her ‘humility’, Naylor says that cancer has made her appreciate the simple things in life, such as a heartfelt letter from an old friend.
In an Instagram post last month Ms Naylor shared ‘a window to the past, full of mischief, misdemeanour and lessons learnt’.
She asks her followers to spend a minute appreciating how lucky they are, ‘then go make some memories’.
My whole world seemed to stop turning’
Naylor first visited her doctor in August this year after suffering flu-like symptoms and shortness of breath for about 8 weeks.
Initially, she blamed her exhaustion on her busy life as a full-time working mother to her children, Eva, four, and Oscar, two, who she raises herself after a recent split from her husband.
Naylor said: ‘I’d seen the doctor a fair bit with my children, so, as soon as I went in there she could tell I wasn’t right. I looked rough and wasn’t my normal bubbly self.’
At the hospital, an X-ray revealed what looked like a clot on her right lung, as well as abnormal blood tests.
After she was given blood-thinning injections, doctors wanted to investigate further and asked her to return for a more detailed CT scan the next day.
She said: ‘That’s when everything changed for me. My whole world seemed to stop turning.
‘I had a wonderful life; a beautiful five-bedroom home in a lovely village, that me and my husband built ourselves, with the help of an architect.
‘And we always had five holidays a year.
‘But none of that mattered when the doctor said I had an abnormal mass in my chest, something they believed to be cancer.’
Cancer doesn’t discriminate’
Naylor’s thoughts quickly raced back to the early death of her own mother, Louise, at just 47, five weeks after being diagnosed with liver cancer.
She said: ‘I was only 21 when my mum died, so when I was told I had cancer, I thought about my young children and how would they cope without me.’
The next day, Naylor had a CT scan and more blood tests.
She said: ‘They found a tumour intertwined between my lung and my heart. I really felt like there was going to be no turning back from that point.
‘I asked, “Am I going to live?” They couldn’t even answer me that.’
It was not until a PET scan, which examines body tissues, a week later that Naylor was told she had rare stage 2 B Hodgkin lymphoma.
She was then transferred to the Christie cancer hospital, in Withington, where she heard that she would need six months of gruelling chemotherapy, possibly followed by radiotherapy.
She said: ‘My mum never got to the stage of having chemo, as she was so unwell, so I don’t know anyone who has ever had it.
‘Cancer doesn’t discriminate. I had no time to wait, so my treatment happened really quickly after my diagnosis.’
Naylor is supporting Stand Up To Cancer, a joint national fundraising campaign from Cancer Research UK and Channel 4 to accelerate groundbreaking cancer research and save more lives, more quickly. Find more information here.
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