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Breast Cancer Ribbon

Posts Tagged ‘fitness’

It must have been a shock?

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I met a friend at a party on Saturday who I hadn’t seen for a few months. Barbara used to be the landlady of our local pub, the Grapes, and moved back to her flat on the other side of town in September when she sold the lease to Grapes neighbour Sir Ian Mckellan and his partners in the venture, theatre director Sean Matthias and Evening Standard owner Evgeny Lebedev.

Barbara didn’t know about my breast cancer and she was quite shocked and sorry to hear about it when we met. In the cold light of the following day she emailed me, reiterating how sorry she was. “It must have been such a shock,” she said. I thought about that. My girlfriend who was diagnosed last week and who has been caught very early, broke down I tears when I spoke to her. “I’m really sorry,” she said, knowing that in the scheme of things hers was considerably less serious than mine, “It’s just that I only found out a few days ago and it was such a shock,” she said by way of justifying the tears.

Had it been a shock to me? I wasn’t even sure. On one level, it must of course have been. The only things that would have mitigated that shock were the fact that I knew there was something wrong myself, and I suppose the initial shock came when I got a recall from my mammogram, confirming my own worst fears.

I know it was a huge shock to Martin when I came out of the first consultation with the specialist, lent into the cab on my way across the road to see the secretary about booking all my tests and told him: “I’m afraid he’s pretty sure it’s the big C.” But from that moment, I went into overdrive.

When Martin asked if I still wanted to go down to Ramsgate for a party that weekend, I said, of course. We had to carry on as normal until something stopped us carrying on as normal. And that it precisely what I have done so far. In the nine weeks since that day I have carried on as normally as possible. I am actually having my fourth chemo session as I write this. I suppose there have been moments when the “shock” did start to filter through. But not many. Which led me to consider, when Barbara suggested it must have been such a shock, whether in fact I was still ‘in’ shock.

Ironically, we have just watched the film “The Bucket List” with Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman about two terminally ill men who write a list of things they want to do before they kick the bucket (I am home now after chemo, which all went well and to which I was accompanied by my friend Gilly, thanks G, and once she left I had a lovely reflexolgy treatment).

The film had some pretty awful reviews when it cam out, ( see this one for example, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/3671168/Film-reviews-The-Bucket-List.html) but I thought it was excellent, if a little poignant in my situation. I mean, Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman. They could read the telephone directory and it would be fantastic. Anyway, whatever its merits, when they first found out about their illnesses they talked about the five stages of grief — denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. I thought, am I in denial? But I don’t think so. I had Hodgkins Disease at 17. It happened, I dealt with it, I got through it.

The same will happen this time. But that’s not to say I sit around dwelling on the idea of having cancer. I’m too busy communicating with and seeing friends and loved ones, keeping fit, working, oh yes, and having treatment and getting healthy.

So yes, it was certainly a shock for Martin and my parents and sister and all my family and friends. And I suppose it must have been a shock for me. But shock is not a productive state to be in. I have far too much to do in the next six months or so to entertain it. When I’m successfully through it all, it may creep up to hit me. But not now.

Andrew Frimpong’s leaving!!

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Get running girls, no time to slack
Don’t think of skulking at the back
If you think you can hide, you’re sadly wrong
‘Neath the eagle eye of Andrew Frimpong

To him your fitness is no joke
A gentle touch would make him choke
With exercise he’ll not let you flirt
His regime is cruel and it’s going to hurt!

Get running clockwise round the room
And do not let him see your gloom
This man just feeds right off your pain
He’ll up the reps the more you complain

The man who does one-armed press-ups with ease
Just loves to make you do burpees
The more you hurt, the more he grins
The more you scream, the more he wins

He takes no prisoners, that’s for sure
Your battle for fitness is his war
Like a sergeant on a parade ground
He loves to make you jump around

Press-ups, star jumps, squats and crunchies
You can take him chocolate for his munchies
But even choose his favourite flavour
You still won’t curry any favour

Lunges with weights on the bench
You should hear the way he maligns the French
But politically correct is not his style
At least he slags them off with a smile

And his methods work, no doubt of it
His victims now are pretty fit
So no wonder they’re feeling a bit of stress
What happens to them now is anyone’s guess

It really is quite a disgrace
Coz Andrew’s leaving Vintners Place
He’s legging it as fast as he can
To go and be a fireman

And though they thought that he was cruel
The pupils at his fitness school
Are now he’s going, getting crabby
They’re scared that they will end up flabby

They’ll be sad to see dear Andrew leave
If the truth were known I think they’ll grieve
So we hope in his new job he’ll do well
But remember those he put through hell

If going out and fighting a fire
Is not everything to which you aspire
You could always come back to see your chums
And help repair their saggy bums!

©Jo Wallen Ross
25th September 2009

For Danny Hollis on his 70th

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I am a member of a gym
I do aerobics to keep slim
Eat fatty fish and little beef
Tomatoes and a lettuce leaf

I follow all the diet tips
Puddings rarely pass my lips
Though gin and tonic is divine
I try to stick to dry white wine

Moisturise my skin, condition my hair
I take the very best of care
Life’s risks, I always gauge
That I might reach a ripe old age

I wonder though, if all this pain
Is, perhaps, a bit in vain
For while I keep my urges reined
There is one who’s less restrained

Who vaguely remembers exercise
But my word, how the time flies
Since last, sport his life did rule
I do believe he was at school

No memberships of a gym or club
Just right arm raises down the pub
These diets are not all they seem
He gets all he needs from a tub of ice cream

A sticky bun and a pint of ale
To prepare him for a ‘healthy’ sail
One sport on which he’s very keen
But it hardly keeps him lithe and lean

Well, his yardarm, it is very low
The sun has scarce begun to glow
When he takes his first wee sip
And settles back for a midday kip

As he wakens, with a little snort
The boat’s just pulling into port
The crew, relieved, say three cheers
And crack open a few more beers

Before they venture off ashore
To get some food and drink some more
And stumble drunkenly back on board
To put to bed this great sea lord

He did once buy himself a bike
With just two wheels, not a trike
But firing the engine by turning the key
Only burned one calorie

If talking, for hours on end
Did thousands of kilojoules expend
The weight that simply fell from Danny
Would, you’d find, be quite uncanny

At conversation he excels
A fountain of knowledge with no dry wells
A raconteur, a reciting poet
He’s erudite, and likes to show it

There’s other things at which he’s good
He turns a fine bit of wood
Now what else is good about Danny?
Oh yes, of course, it’s simply Annie!

No he’s hardly a picture of sporting prowess
But he’s got this far, nevertheless
I ask you, fitness, what’s the use?
If 70 years of wanton abuse

Can leave you in the prime of life
Having fun with little strife
So hang the regime, bring on the booze
It’s the Danny Hollis diet I choose

Let’s raise a glass of alcohol
As Danny’s praises we extol
Chin, chin, old chap, we all say cheers
To the next hard-living seventy years!

Joanne Ross – 29th April 2006