The New Zealand Herald

WEIGHT LIFTED

Cancer survivor rebounds from near death to strut stuff on world stage

- Carla Penman

Cancer survivor’s amazing transforma­tion

Kerikeri cancer survivor Gary-John Hill laughs now at his dramatic physical transforma­tion just six months after finishing gruelling chemothera­py treatment.

In two photos side by side, taken six months apart, he looks almost unrecognis­able.

The man on the left is pale, has little muscle to him, is skinnier and his hair has fallen out, while the man on the right is toned, tanned and has a full head of hair.

Speaking to the Herald, Hill, a personal trainer, said his battle with cancer that began just last September almost claimed his life.

“I felt pretty good, then all of a sudden started coughing and went backwards and forwards to a doctor. I just thought it was a cold,” the 30-year-old said.

It was then that he learned he had stage-four cancer and, if he didn’t undergo chemothera­py immediatel­y, he had just two weeks to live.

“It was a 60cm tumour in my chest, pushing up against my heart, covering my lungs.”

He had tumours in his lungs, his neck and his kidneys.

Hill started treatment the very next day. The sudden shift in his health was, as he described it, “pretty damn scary”.

He endured seven long months of treatment. Hill was almost speechless when asked how difficult that was.

“There were times where I just wanted to die because it was so hard. I didn’t care any more.”

The type of treatment Hill had meant he couldn’t go out, as even the smallest infection could kill him.

“I wasn’t allowed to socialise, I wasn’t allowed to see my family, you know, only close family.”

Hill said his last chemothera­py

session was timed well as he had reached his limit. “I was free of cancer but the treatment would’ve killed me. By the end of it, I was a shadow of a man.” Hill lost 30kg and said even getting out of his hospital bed was a struggle. When he went home, he was quiet, weak and didn’t want to do anything. “I was still in treatment mode where I had to be really careful of germs . . . I was still scared of everyone. I became scared of the supermarke­t, scared of the gym where I wanted to go to get stronger again. “I eventually got my confidence back and started meeting people and started not to worry about it so much and let things sort of fly.”

He got back into training, making very slow progress at first.

“My abs and my legs hurt after walking 200 metres down the road, that’s how much my muscles weren’t used to being used. I struggled to sort of lift my arms up.”

Hill admitted that he looked “pretty funny” at that point.

“I looked like a 67-year-old man and I was only 29 years old.”

He could only muster very light weights. “I’m quite a tall guy so I looked fairly lanky and really skinny so I didn’t look well at all.”

Week by week, his ability to carry heavier weights improved and he began to feel like his old self again.

Now, he’s gearing up to compete in the WBFF beauty, fitness and fashion worlds in Las Vegas. He heads to the United States on Monday.

“I’m so happy to have this gift and to have got [so] much stronger,” Hill said. “It’s more than physical, it’s mental as well.”

He still has a mass inside his chest but there’s no cancer in it.

Hill has to have checkups every three months.

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 ??  ?? Gary-John Hill, from Kerikeri, was treated for stage 4 cancer, diagnosed last September. Once he finished chemothera­py (left) in February 2018 he trained for a bodybuildi­ng competitio­n this month.
Gary-John Hill, from Kerikeri, was treated for stage 4 cancer, diagnosed last September. Once he finished chemothera­py (left) in February 2018 he trained for a bodybuildi­ng competitio­n this month.
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