RACE for Life in Southampton is the largest single event of its kind in the country.
On Sunday July 13, thousands of women will gather to raise money for Cancer Research UK.
It will be a day of high emotion - loved ones remembered and survivors celebrated coming through the disease. There will be great sadness at the loss of so many and immense joy at what can be achieved when people unite for a common cause.
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Click here for some of the pictures from the 2008 Southampton Race for LifeAn inspiration to us all
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| Olivia Gallienne (left) with mum Katie |
THEY ARE THE MARKS THAT
will never be removed.
A toddler's mischievous scribbles etched
into the furniture are not cause for dismay
in the Gallienne household.
Instead the ink stains are a comforting
reminder of their youngest daughter.
It is eight months since Olivia lost
her battle with leukaemia, but the family
feel the two-year-old is still very much
with them.
"She's still part of the family," says
Katie. "I still put her name in our
Christmas cards and I put an angel's face
in the letter O'.
"Just because she's gone doesn't mean
she's not still one of us. We feel her here
all the time. She flickers the lights and
everywhere we go we see a white feather.
"I know she's still here but I can't
see her or touch her and that's what
hurts the most."
Olivia was diagnosed with acute
lymphoblastic leukaemia at
just five weeks old - the
youngest child to be
treated for the disease
at Southampton
General hospital.
The odds of
contracting
leukaemia so soon
after birth are one
in a million.
When doctors
discovered the
disease - after
Katie and her
husband Andrew
spotted bruises on
Olivia's legs - it was
already very advanced
and the Galliennes were
told it could have killed their
daughter within a week if it had
gone undetected.
But Olivia had a habit of proving the
medics wrong.
Despite the bleak prognosis (doctors said
she was unlikely to reach her first
birthday) Olivia did go into remission
and when the cancer returned ten months
later she beat the odds again, undergoing
a successful bone marrow transplant
which carried just a five per cent chance
of survival.
Then, during the 616 days Olivia spent
in hospital, including countless spells in
intensive care, her mum and dad were told
to say their goodbyes time and time again.
But somehow little Olivia - the recipient
of a Cancer Research Little Star Award for
bravery - always pulled through.
"Hospital became normal for her," says
Katie. "She was happier there than at
home. It was easier on us that way. I've
heard of older children screaming at their
parents: I hate you. Get away from me'
because they're fed up of all the treatment.
I don't think we could have coped with
that. Older children understand too much.
"Olivia grew up in hospital for the first
three months of her life. If we brought her
home she wouldn't sleep or eat, but in
hospital with all the lights and the
machinery beeping she would be happiest.
"That's what amazed all the staff.
Even at her worst she was still smiling
and waving."
It is that spirit that captured the hearts of
thousands at last year's Race for Life when
she toddled across the finish line flanked
by Katie and seven year-old sister Jazmine.
By then, the toddler who had just learnt
to walk again after months of hospital
treatment, had become a symbol of the
Southampton event.
"I didn't think we would ever get to that
point," remembers Katie. "It's something
we thought we'd never see."
Sadly just one month after charming
the crowds at Race for Life Olivia
suffered a mini-stroke and finally lost her
battle for survival.
Cruelly, it happened when she
seemed to be making progress - free of the
oxygen supply she had relied on for so
long and home from hospital for a
record 16 weeks.
"It makes me angry. If it was the
leukaemia coming back I could accept it
more," says Katie.
Seeing their daughter back in intensive
care didn't phase the Galliennes.
"It was nothing new for us. She'd been
on a ventilator before and she was always
alright so I wasn't worried. She'd done it
before, I thought she could do it again.
"Then we found she'd had a bleed to
the brain and the doctors took us aside
and said we should think about letting
her go. I said: I'm not having it. You've
told us this before and what if we'd
listened then?'
"But her blood pressure kept rocketing
and doctors said that if it happened again
her heart would stop anyway.
"They said we could either let that
happen or make the decision to turn off
the ventilator ourselves. In the end we
decided she was never going to wake up
and so we would let her go peacefully by
turning off the ventilator.
"Even then we could choose when to do
it so we had time to call all the family and
they could travel to the ward.
"We took photos, made hand and
foot prints and cut pieces of her hair for
people to keep."
Hospital staff who had been with
Olivia from the beginning also came
to be with her.
"They knew her better than some family
members. They were her family and they
became my friends. When I was in the
hospital overnight they became my social
life. They made our life 100 per cent
better than it would have been and it's
thanks to them that we got two years and
ten months with Olivia."
After her death, the family chose to take
Olivia to rest in her room at
Southampton's Piam Brown Ward where
she had been diagnosed and where the
family had spent so much time together.
Unable to face leaving her alone, the
Galliennes stayed in Southampton
overnight before returning to their
Alresford home where they are now
adjusting slowly to life without Olivia.
"All three of us are different in the way
we have dealt with it. Other people I
know from the ward who have gone
through it have found they can't still go
out and visit the places they used to go as
a family or they feel guilty for enjoying themselves. They shut themselves away
and cry.
"Maybe people will think I'm
strange, but we still go out and do
normal things together.
"We don't cry a lot but we think about
her a lot.
"I think accepting that she wasn't
always going to be here has helped us
cope. I never looked further than a week
ahead and I always knew she would
never go to school. We took so many
photos and videos of her and we made
the most of the time we had with her."
But there are darker moments.
"We always say she's in heaven, but
this is hell for us now because she's not
with us," says Katie.
"We tried for three years to get
pregnant with Olivia and then she
was taken away from us. Even now I
still think why did it pick us? What
have we done to anybody? There is no
answer to that question and it will
always be with us."
For now the family are taking comfort
in fundraising - they have already raised
£4,000 for the Piam Brown ward and
Andrew is planning a charity parachute
jump later this year.
They also have Jazmine to think about.
"I think we're lucky that we have
another child. Jazmine needs things
to be normal. She has ups and downs
but she is coping well and this whole
experience has brought us even closer
together as a family."
Now Jazmine's most treasured
possessions are her memory box, filled
with photos and momentos of her sister,
and a pillow printed with Olivia's
photograph.
"I'll always remember Olivia
walking around the furniture
and pushing her little trolley,"
smiles Katie.
"She was a cheeky monkey and
always had a smile."
Those memories will be even
more vivid at this year's Race for Life
on July 13.
"It will be the first year without Olivia
so it will be an emotional one for us,"
says Katie. "We'll have to get the tissues
out definitely.
"Before Olivia, we'd never thought
about doing Race for Life because
cancer was something that didn't
affect us. Now it's become a personal
event for us.
"Without money raised from events like
Race for Life we wouldn't have
got where we were with Olivia. We
wouldn't have had the time that
we did. And with more fundraising, other
people will be able to get even further."
3:23pm Monday 12th May 2008
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