Carmarthen Journal

I named me and Anne the Chemo Sisters!

Sisters Linda and Anne Nolan, of the iconic Irish group The Nolans, tell HANNAH STEPHENSON about how staying positive is as important as their cancer drugs

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THERE has been so much cancer in the lives of the Nolan sisters that they could be forgiven for thinking ‘Why me?’

The death of their beloved sister Bernadette (Bernie) in 2013, aged 52, from breast cancer which had spread to her brain, lungs, liver and bones, was a huge wrench to the family.

Linda, 62, is now living with incurable cancer and is having palliative care.

Anne was told at around the same time last year that the breast cancer she suffered in 2000 had returned. After treat-ment, it is now in remission and at present she is cancer-free.

Anne, 70, never feels as if her family has been unlucky, she says.

“There are millions of people who’ve gone through worse than what we’ve gone through, families with fewer siblings than we have. There are eight kids in our family and three of us have had cancer.”

Linda adds: “I never think, ‘Why me?’ It was Bernie who said, ‘Why not me?’ But I do feel we’ve had bad luck that the three of us have got it”

Meeting them today on Zoom, neither shows a modicum of self pity. Their hair is growing back and they relay how last year they were both able to have chemothera­py together during the pandemic, which provided much comfort at a difficult time.

Despite their experience­s with cancer, humour is never far from their lips.

“You have heard of the dance DJ group The Chemical Brothers; well, I named me and Anne the Chemo Sisters!” Linda recalls.

Linda, the more extrovert of the two, made life much easier when they were having treatment together, always chatting to the nurses and getting all of their phone numbers, Anne recalls.

“It did help that we were both there together, especially because of Covid. It can be a lonely road,” Linda reflects. “When Anne was diagnosed, we would have all been round her house immediatel­y, we’d have had a laugh, we’d have had a cry, but all we could do was stand at her garden wall and wave. Having treatment together made it easier for us.”

Anne recalls: “I was scared of stepping outside the door for fresh air because the oncologist had said to us, ‘If you get the virus it could be fatal, you could die’.”

When word got out that the sisters were having treatment together, a little pigeon hole was set up in the hospital for all the fan mail that arrived, Linda recalls.

They have now written Stronger Together, an account of their journey with cancer with no holds barred descriptio­ns of their treatments, the side effects, how they coped with losing their hair, the nerve damage that still gives them pain and how they have emerged on the other side.

The book is interspers­ed with recollecti­ons of how cancer has affected those close to them, including their late sister Bernie and also Linda’s late husband, Brian, who had skin cancer.

They decided to write the book partly to help people with cancer know that they are not alone, says Anne. “It might help people who have cancer, or even those who haven’t had cancer, know what it’s like,” she explains. Linda’s breast cancer (which was diagnosed in 2006) returned in 2017 as secondary in her hip. Then last year she was told it had spread to her liver and that it’s incurable but can be managed. She could potentiall­y live another 15 years, they have been told.

The siblings have clearly rallied round. Linda lived with her sister Denise and her partner Tom last year, but is now back in her own house, while another sister, Maureen, moved in to look after Anne when she was having chemothera­py – and has never left.

Apart from Coleen, who lives in Cheshire, the sisters and brothers live nearby, so there is always support on hand.

“It can be lonely,” Linda says of lockdown. “But I’ve been lucky enough to be in a bubble with family. I’m lucky to wake up every morning and my treatment is going well.”

Anne, who was originally diagnosed with cancer in 2000, is on anti-cancer drugs and has regular MRI scans. She admits she does worry about the cancer returning.

“I worry all the time. If I bang my knee and then two days later I feel a lump where I banged it, I immediatel­y think it’s cancer I have coun- selling about that.”

Yet there is a stoicism about both women. They are open and honest about the debilitati­ng side effects of their treatments.

There’s also a chapter devoted to their beloved sister Bernie, which brought back painful memories.

“When I eventually had my head shaved, I looked in the mirror and I saw Bernie, because we look alike. We think about her every day. Every day we miss her,” says Linda.

The sisters’ shared cancer experience has brought them closer together and they both live their lives differentl­y now, they agree.

“Cancer has given me a sense of freedom. It’s so priceless to have time with the sisters and the kids. I might not be here for the next party or the next Christmas,” Linda says.

Anne agrees: “I look at things differentl­y. I think, ‘Wow!’ Look at the sky!’ I look at things in a different way.”

Just before lockdown, they began filming a reality show called The Nolans Go Cruising, with Coleen

and Maureen - the first time the sisters had all been together for 20 years. The trip was a success, but they doubt they’ll sing together profession­ally again.

“It wouldn’t be the hip hop tour, it would be the hip op tour,” laughs Linda.

Anne is more optimistic, say-ing they could do an album, or An Evening With The Nolans, sitting on stools and answer-ing questions. How do they remain so positive?

“You have two choices,” says Anne. “You can let it get to you and be down all the time, which doesn’t help you or your family. Or you can be positive. And the more positive you are, the better your life is.”

Linda adds: “My oncologist says that being positive is as important as the drugs. And I’ve got a lot to live for. I have a fabulous family and wonderful friends.”

Anne sums up the pair’s advice: “Try to not make cancer define you. Live your life the way you want to.”

The more positive you are, the better your life is ’ Anne Nolan

 ??  ?? Linda and Anne Nolan have supported each other through cancer
Linda and Anne Nolan have supported each other through cancer
 ??  ?? ■ Stronger Together by Linda & Anne Nolan is published by Ebury Press, priced £16.99
■ Stronger Together by Linda & Anne Nolan is published by Ebury Press, priced £16.99
 ??  ?? The Nolans in 1983 (from left) Linda, Anne, Bernie, Coleen and Maureen
The Nolans in 1983 (from left) Linda, Anne, Bernie, Coleen and Maureen
 ??  ?? Bernie Nolan
Bernie Nolan

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