Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Triathlete battling cancer takes perseveran­ce to another level

- KRISTEN ODLAND kodland@postmedia.com

The air quality has been a deterrent for some riders.

Not for Malcolm Stinson. A slight knee injury could be an excuse for many runners. Not the 57-year-old Edmonton resident.

Multiple myeloma, a cancer of plasma cells which can cause bone pain, bleeding, frequent infections and anemia, might slow anybody down, let alone an experience­d triathlete.

Not Stinson.

With myriad potential reasons not to train, race, and complete a half-Ironman triathlon every day this month, the bigger cause is much more important.

“It’s not about me … that’s not the point,” Stinson said after finishing another long day of training. “The point is, I’m really trying to show that people who have cancer can live active and full lives and live as if you have a future. You don’t have to sit and wait for things to come to you. You can go out there and grab life and seize the day.”

It’s what Stinson has been doing since being diagnosed in 2009 with Stage 3 myeloma and was told he had two years to live. Instead, he hopped on his bike and began competing competitiv­ely in the sport of triathlon.

This year he decided to take on another challenge by raising money and awareness of multiple myeloma through triathlon and an initiative called Living to Tri.

Stinson set the goal of doing a triathlon every day for the entire month. Every day since July 1, he has swum 1.2 miles, biked 56 miles, and run 13.1 miles (a halfIronma­n distance triathlon).

Keep in mind — Stinson has been doing this while undergoing chemothera­py.

“I’m one of the very lucky few that has virtually no side-effects (from chemothera­py),” he said. “That’s how I’m able to do this. I thought that other people in my situation that are not having such positive results may feel bitter or jealous or some negative emotion … but they’re not. I’m getting lots of supportive emails. People are taking inspiratio­n from it.

“People that are having trouble with their chemothera­py are actually inspired, which is a good thing. I’m getting incredible stories from people. People that are telling me that they were recently diagnosed with multiple myeloma … and can see there is a full life ahead of them. They don’t have to be shut down.”

It’s not easy. But neither is the battle many people with cancer are fighting every day.

“The stories I’m getting are pretty humbling, in a sense.”

Triathlon can be an extremely individual sport; one relies completely on their own abilities to compete and complete a race.

But Stinson has been getting loads of support with the logistics — meals, support vehicles, transporta­tion — so he’s able to concentrat­e on the athletic aspect of his journey.

“I’m getting way more help than I anticipate­d,” said Stinson, who is also assisted by his daughters Heather and Victoria. “I haven’t been alone for a second.”

For Stinson, the physical side of his challenge pales in comparison to the larger battle at hand — raising money and awareness for multiple myeloma.

“The main reason I’m doing this is not to show people I can do triathlons — lots of people can do triathlons and physical endurance feats,” he said. “That’s not the point. The point is to show them that cancer is … huge advances have been made in minimizing the side-effects. What’s the point of living if you’re barely even existing?”

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