A fitness instructor who assumed she had pulled a muscle in her neck in fact had stage four cancer.
Lily Venus, then aged 24, visited her GP in November 2021 after a painful lump near her collarbone made her job teaching Zoom exercise classes challenging.
Two weeks later, she was diagnosed with stage four Hodgkin lymphoma, a type of blood cancer, and told she had tumours in both sides of her neck, as well as on her chest and lung.
Miss Venus, from Winchester in Hampshire, underwent 12 gruelling rounds of chemotherapy at University Hospital Southampton and was told she may lose her fertility.
But the now-26-year-old has been in remission for one year, is back to teaching fitness class and has kept her fertility.
Lily Venus, then aged 24, assumed she had pulled a muscle in her neck in fact had stage four cancer
Two weeks later she was diagnosed with stage four Hodgkin lymphoma, a type of blood cancer, and told she had tumours in both sides of her neck, her chest, and her lung
She visited her GP in November 2021 after a painful lump (pictured) near her collarbone made her job teaching Zoom classes challenging
In September 2021, while teaching six exercise classes a week over zoom, Miss Venus started to experience light-headedness.
She was also ‘incredibly fatigued’, napping at least once a day.
Miss Venus and her partner-of-eight years Ryan Lynch, a 36-year-old gardening business owner, went to Petersfield for a short break in November 2021 before driving to York to pick up a new puppy.
‘On the drive, I had an awkward feeling in my neck,’ she said. ‘It felt like I had slept funny.’
Miss Venus’s symptoms persisted for the next week but she put them down to being exhausted from exercise and having a new puppy to care for.
‘At the end of that week, I had a lump come up just above my collarbone,’ she said.
‘The discomfort was preventing me from being able to teach the upper-body parts of my exercise classes, so I booked a doctor’s appointment.’
Miss Venus’ doctor at St Clements Surgery, Winchester, told her she needed to go to A&E – which she thought was an ‘overreaction’ – but on November 18, 2021, she was dealt the devastating news that she had cancer.
Hodgkin lymphoma starts in the white blood cells.
It is named after Thomas Hodgkin, an English doctor who first identified the disease in 1832.
It affects around 2,000 people each year in the UK, and 8,500 a year in the US.
Miss Venus began the first of a six-month course of chemotherapy just before Christmas that year and was treated at University Hospital Southampton.
Doctors told Miss Venus that her cancer was responding well to the chemo and she was able to receive a lower dose on her last eight sessions. She finished chemotherapy on May 20 and is now in remission.
Before her treatment began, doctors informed her there was a ‘slim’ risk she could lose her fertility and offered her IVF.
But this would have delayed her chemotherapy by six months.
‘I found making this decision really tough,’ she said. ‘I talked to Ryan about it and he said, “Without you, there is no baby. It’s important we get you healthy as soon as possible”.
‘I am so grateful this is how he viewed it because my cancer was already stage four and Hodgkin lymphoma is fast-growing. Who knows where I would be if I hadn’t started chemotherapy straight away.’
Miss Venus, from Winchester, Hampshire, underwent 12 gruelling rounds of chemotherapy at University Hospital Southampton and was told she may lose her fertility
In September 2021, while teaching six exercise classes a week over zoom, Miss Venus started to experience light-headedness
But the now-26-year-old has been in remission for one year, is back to teaching fitness class and has kept her fertility
Miss Venus kept her fertility but says she now has lots of new allergies, and ‘my heart and other organs will forever be weaker than they once were’.
She said she is ‘so grateful’ to her doctors for catching it quickly.
‘I feel like catching my cancer at the stage it was is one of the reasons I was able to achieve remission’, she said.
Miss Venus said: ‘I am most looking forward to life, every little tiny bit of it and everything in between.
‘I have always dreamt of being a mother, and not knowing if I would be able to achieve that title in my life has only made me long for it even more.
‘During my treatment, I had to accept changes such as losing my hair, not being able to show up for people as I had been, and not being able to live my life as I had been.
‘After my treatment, I had to accept that I will never have that year again.
She added: ‘I am so grateful to be able to move onwards and upwards with a new appreciation for how wonderful life is.’
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