Weekend Herald

Thank you, cancer

Jake Bailey’s powerful valedictor­y speech as he recovered from cancer made headlines around the world. In this extract from his new book, Bailey reveals the ways in which the disease gave him unexpected gifts.

-

Cancer survivor Jake Bailey, whose courageous prizegivin­g speech attracted global attention after he struggled from his sick bed to a school assembly hall, has written about lessons he learned while facing death. Bailey, who says he is back to full health, has drawn on the thoughts which came to him in the isolation room at Christchur­ch Hospital's bone marrow transplant unit. In an exclusive extract in today’s Weekend Herald, he writes: “I know now that I’m not grateful for life just because I nearly died, but because in the process of nearly dying I met people who did die.”

MAKE THE STATISTICS WORK FOR YOU My haematolog­ist reckoned there was about a one in three to a one in four chance of the cancer coming back. That sounds like a lot until you flip it around — there’s a 66 to 75 per cent chance that it won’t come back!

Some people find that upsetting, but it’s just what I live with. The knowledge of it makes me much more proactive about looking after myself.

It changes the way I look at life, too. I could be back in hospital in Christchur­ch having chemo again within days, instead of living the life I want with [ girlfriend] Jemima on the Gold Coast. Approachin­g life like that means I also treat the most important people in my life as well as I can. I spend every day that I get doing exactly what I want and as much of it as I want because I know my days might still be limited.

I’m not prepared to die knowing I’ve done things I didn’t want to do, or that I hadn’t done things I wanted to do. It’s a case of prepare for the worst and hope for the best. By doing that, the cancer doesn’t play on my mind at all. I don’t resent it. It doesn’t make me worry or keep me awake at night. It works as a really awesome motivation to get stuff done and I’m grateful for that.

I don’t see cancer as a thief, I see it as giving me the focus to do the things in life that I want to do.

I know it’s frustratin­g to the people around me when they get upset about little things and I’m quite blase about it. It’s just that it’s hard for me to get wound up about something that’s not life- or- death. The core of it comes down to the fact that anything this side of death is manageable. It might be difficult, it could be uncomforta­ble, but it can be dealt with.

I met people who had their lives destroyed. I learnt that I wasn’t unlucky to get cancer, I was lucky to not have something worse happen to me.

Whatever you think of Lance Armstrong, the following quote from him really resonated with me: “The truth is cancer is the best thing that ever happened to me. I don’t know why I got the illness but it did wonders for me and I wouldn’t walk away from it. Why would I want to change for even a day the most important and shaping event in my life?”

I completely get that. I wouldn’t change anything that happened to me. It’s nothing to do with the speech or being recognised or any of the things that have come into my path as a result. It’s about what it taught me. What I learned about life, what I learned about death, and what I learned about myself .

oing through a few really terrible months has set me up for the rest of my life, and my mindset is so different to what it would have been otherwise. I’ve sacrificed those three or four months in order to enjoy the rest of my life so much more. But it has completely changed my view of the world for the better and how I live day to day. Before, I was searching for something distant. Now, I’m in the present.

Once I wanted a corporate job in finance. While I still strive for greater things, I don’t want to strive for power or pleasure. I genuinely want to help others overcome their challenges. I have been given an opportunit­y to turn some of the cancer “mess” into a “message”. A problituni­ty. I want to make the most of it.

I’m certainly not suggesting I am more selfless or more altruistic than others. I’m not. What I am doing is reciprocal. When people tell me I have helped them find courage or peace I am truly surprised and humbled, but it also gives me a sense of purpose and it gives my life meaning. It helps me carve out that legacy I’m determined to leave behind. Thanks cancer, for these unexpected gifts.

I don’t know where it goes from here for any of us. For you. And sure as hell not for me. But I wish you the very best in your journey, and I thank you for reading about mine.

 ?? Picture / Stephen Goodenough ??
Picture / Stephen Goodenough
 ??  ??
 ?? Pictures / Supplied ?? Jake Bailey ( top) and ( above) with his former Christchur­ch Boys’ High principal Nic Hill during the standing ovation for his valedictor­y speech.
Pictures / Supplied Jake Bailey ( top) and ( above) with his former Christchur­ch Boys’ High principal Nic Hill during the standing ovation for his valedictor­y speech.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand