The Sunday Post (Dundee)

A song full of courage, a choir full of gather online to offer support and

Presenter with a love of singing reveals how an extraordin­ary SHONA’S STORY

- By Tracey Bryce trbryce@sundaypost.com “

Laughing over a cup of tea, Laura Boyd and Shona Brown have the easy companions­hip of old friends so it’s hard to believe this is the first time the new mums have met in person.

The pair were brought together during those first uncertain days of the pandemic thanks to a shared love of singing and their experience of living with cancer.

In April, STV presenter Laura, who was diagnosed with chronic myeloid leukaemia 11 years ago, had the idea of starting up a cancer choir to help see her through the precarious­ness of lockdown.

The 39-year-old, from Glasgow, said: “I used to sing with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra Chorus when I was younger and I just love singing, so I had this idea about doing a choir – something to try to help people through lockdown, but also to keep me going.”

Laura put out a message through her Twitter account looking for singers and was inundated with people keen to sign up, including Shona, who was being treated for breast cancer and runs choirs across Glasgow with her company Soundroute­s Singers.

Laura, who is STV’S entertainm­ent reporter and has interviewe­d big-name stars including George Clooney and Chris Pine, explained: “Loads of people got back saying they would be up for it, but there was one problem. I had never led a choir before so finding Shona was like finding the missing piece of the jigsaw.”

The pair swapped numbers and soon began emailing, texting and calling each other to get the project under way.

Before long they had a 30-strong choir, which they aptly named Beat It. Each member of the team has been affected by cancer, whether having been diagnosed themselves, or cared for or lost a relative to the disease. As the world was in the midst of lockdown, and many of the choir members were in the “at risk” category, the only way to rehearse safely was online. Every week they would log into a video call and sing their harmonies from their homes, often using bathrooms for the preferable acoustics.

“There is no technology to form a choir online from people’s homes at the moment,” said Shona. “So I had to lead the choir with everyone’s microphone­s on mute. They could only hear me and themselves.

“Nobody had any idea how anyone else sounded – and I couldn’t hear them singing either so it really was an experiment.”

This week, the group will hear how they sound together for the first time when they release a video of their debut recording Don’t Give Up On Me. The music video was edited together from footage recorded during their online recording sessions.

Shona, 36, said: “To be honest, we didn’t know how long lockdown was

Shona’s breast cancer diagnosis came when Mara, now three, was just eight months old.

After surgery to remove the lump, Shona thought she was over the worst. But there were complicati­ons in the form of sepsis and a blood clot in her heart. She was given a 50% chance of survival.

However, the hardest part, she says, was being too ill to look after her baby and missing out on time to bond.

“I was a new mum dealing with all the complicati­ons that brings, like juggling work with sleepless nights and the demands of the baby and doctors were telling me I had cancer. I just kept saying, ‘I’m a mum. This shouldn’t be happening to me’.” going to last and assumed we would all be able to meet up in person by now. But it has worked out well. And the recording sounds amazing. There is a real bond between all of the singers and I think it shows. We’re in perfect harmony.”

But the strongest bond, without a doubt, is between Shona and Laura, the women who co-ordinated it all. They have forged an unshakable friendship which has proven to be a pillar of strength not just for each other but others touched by cancer around the country.

Laura said: “Shona and I have talked on the phone, emailed, texted…but never met until now. We talk about cancer and treatment and stuff. We may have only met a few months ago, but I do feel like I’ve known her all my life.

“I feel good most of the time and try to get on and live a normal life but it’s lovely to be able to talk to someone who understand­s what you are going through.” The TV personalit­y said finding out she had cancer while in her 20s was “like being hit by a lightning bolt”.

“In the space of a few hours, my life changed completely,” she said. “I had flu-like symptoms and felt tired. My GP thought I had IBS or Crohn’s. But one day I kept fainting every time I stood up. When I went back to the surgery, they said, ‘you have cancer’.

“I found when I was first

diagnosed everyone would say ‘you’re going to be OK’. I understood that. I’m a very positive person and that’s the kind of thing I would say but sometimes you just need someone who gets it.”

Shona, who is currently awaiting preventati­ve double mastectomy surgery, said: “People think once you are over the bulk of your cancer treatment, that it’s all over but the truth is it’s a trauma that haunts you for the rest of your life.

“You find yourself putting a brave face on it, for your child, and for everyone else but even years on, it’s still hard.”

She said the relaxed support of Laura and the other choir members had been invaluable as they built firm friendship­s around their shared experience­s of cancer.

Shona said: “Meeting Laura has been a blessing. It’s so therapeuti­c being around someone who just understand­s.

We’ve both had different experience­s, but the way cancer turns your life on its head is something you can only really ‘get’ when you’ve lived through it – and she has. Lockdown has been hard, but there have been some positives. I’ve been able to make up for lost time with my daughter Mara – and we’ve done something to help others on their cancer journey feel a little less on their own because it can be an isolating process.

“I have also made a new friend in Laura which is an added bonus. It’s so nice to meet up in person. I think the next time we need to make sure we have a glass of wine in hand, and we can put the world to rights.

“And plan for the next choir block. We’re going to continue and hopefully get a nice new song under wraps in time for Christmas!”

 ??  ?? Shona Brown, left, and three-year-old daughter Mara meets Laura Boyd and her nine-month-old
Shona Brown, left, and three-year-old daughter Mara meets Laura Boyd and her nine-month-old
 ?? Picture: Andrew Cawley ??
Picture: Andrew Cawley

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