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  • 18/06/2025
In the 1970’s , South Shields born, John Walker Pattison was told he wouldn’t survive his cancer diagnosis, five decades later he has released a memoir of his life as a survivor.

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00:00To be perfectly honest, there was some collusion initially with my parents who wanted to try and
00:07keep that diagnosis from me. Now, I never, ever agreed with their collusion, although I can
00:14understand why they wanted to do that. There is no worse feeling in the world than being told that
00:19your child has a cancer diagnosis, despite me being 18 at the time. So I found out by complete
00:25accident, I overheard one of the doctors mentioning my name and saying that I had stage four
00:32lymphoma. That meant absolutely nothing to me. I was currently working in the local shipyard
00:37and happened to pick up a newspaper when I was in hospital having investigations and read about
00:43a soap star who also had lymphoma. So when I read more about this, it then divulged that this person
00:51had a type of blood cancer. Well, it was like being hit in the face with a baseball bat.
01:00The emotional turbulence, a kaleidoscope of unknown emotions to myself. I was on a rollercoaster
01:08ride that I didn't want to be on, that I wanted to get off, but I knew I couldn't.
01:12At 18 years old, John was told that he would not survive his cancer diagnosis.
01:17Now in 2025, he is one of the country's longest surviving cancer patients.
01:24It's a very humbling experience to know that one in two of the population sadly will get
01:31a cancer diagnosis. And we know only too well that not everyone survives. So I do appreciate
01:38every day of life. I do know how fortunate I am. So that never leaves me. Having worked my
01:44entire nursing career in cancer services, I felt I was giving something back to cancer patients.
01:52But in retirement, I wanted to continue to give something back. So I decided I would write
01:57Shadow of a Survivor, which is a three-dimensional account of survivorship. It's not only about
02:05myself and the wreckage of failed chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatments and the fact that
02:12my parents were told that I wouldn't survive less than 10 years after my unexpected recovery,
02:17my four-year-old daughter was diagnosed with terminal leukemia. She then went on to have five months
02:25of brutal chemotherapy. And it was probably harder for me to watch her go through chemotherapy
02:31than it was to have the chemotherapy myself. Unfortunately, she deteriorated quite rapidly and
02:37we were told she would not survive. However, like her father, she also went into a spontaneous
02:43remission. She went from strength to strength and then she eventually went on to become an
02:48international swimmer. Swam for Team GB in New Zealand in 1998, making me one of the proudest
02:55fathers in the world. And she came home with two silver medals.

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