The diagnosis hit her dad and brother hard.
At 17, Deb Middleton had lost her mother to breast cancer.听
Now, at 33, she, too, was facing the same disease.
鈥淚t was incredibly difficult for my family,鈥 the Port Coquitlam resident recalled. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 want to go through the pain again.鈥
A native of the Isle of Man, a self-governing British Crown dependency in the Irish Sea, Middleton had originally moved to Canada to work as a nanny, caring for three young children.听
She loved her life 鈥 and was healthy and strong 鈥 so the medical results came back as a shock.
Luckily, though, the illness was caught early and she made a full recovery after surgery.
It was around this time that 鈥淒r. Don鈥 entered her life, she said.
In 1996, Dr. Don McKenzie sought to disprove a UBC study that concluded women who had breast cancer shouldn鈥檛 do upper-body exercises because they would develop lymphedema.
For his hypothesis, he picked 24 women from the Lower Mainland 鈥 including Middleton 鈥 to start a program called Abreast In A Boat, the world鈥檚 first dragon boat paddle team made up only of female breast cancer survivors.
Middleton took to the sport like a duck to water, even leading the crew.
But the following year, the cancer returned. She underwent radiation only to find it come back two years later, quite aggressively.
Again, Middleton licked the disease.听
Today, she proudly states, 鈥淚鈥檓 clear. I鈥檓 fabulous and I鈥檓 so, so lucky. I live and love every day.鈥
And she ensures she stays active.
A manager of a group home for special needs adults in Maple Ridge, Middleton kayaks, hikes, camps and travels regularly.
She also hasn鈥檛 missed a year with Abreast In A Boat and also coaches the Al-O-Wetters, a women鈥檚 dragon boat paddling club team in Pitt Meadows now in its sixth year.
Middleton keeps in touch with her doctor for check-ups now and then, and she often shares her cancer story with others.
Sunday, she鈥檒l talk about her medical journeys before thousands of people in front of the Hyde Creek recreation centre, where Terry Fox Hometown Run organizers have invited her to be the keynote speaker.
There, Middleton said she鈥檒l praise Fox for embarking on his 1980 Marathon of Hope and for paving the way for cancer research and awareness.
鈥淚 want to thank Terry Fox for what he did and for the money he raised. It has helped many people, including myself.鈥
Afterward, with her red Terry鈥檚 Team member T-shirt on, she鈥檒l stand in the front of the line 鈥 with other cancer survivors 鈥 to kick off the annual run, an event she鈥檚 taken part in nearly every year with her friends and other sister paddlers.
鈥⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌⑩赌
SIGN UP FOR LOCAL TERRY FOX RUNS
You can take part in one of the four Terry Fox runs in the Tri-Cities on Sunday, Sept. 16:
鈥 in Fox鈥檚 hometown of PoCo (10 a.m. start at Hyde Creek recreation centre, 1379 Laurier St., with three-time cancer survivor Debbie Middleton delivering the keynote speech);
鈥 Coquitlam (10 a.m. start at Mundy Park, 641 Hillcrest St., with Marathon of Hope publicist Bill Vigars delivering the keynote);
鈥 Port Moody (10 a.m. start at Rocky Point Park, 2800-block of Murray St.);
鈥 and Anmore (12:30 p.m. start at Spirit Park, 2697 Sunnyside Rd. with Terry Fox Foundation BC/Yukon director Donna White as keynote).
Register in advance online via .听
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TERRY TRAINING
Do you remember Terry Fox training in the Tri-Cities for the Marathon of Hope? Send us your story, to be published in our Friday edition. Email your words and photos to: [email protected] by Thursday morning.
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