sarah also says there hasn’t been much improvement in outcomes since her father-in-law died from pancreatic cancer over 15 years ago (when he was 20 years older than david was). and while it doesn’t have the profile of breast or prostate cancer, pancreatic cancer is on track to become the second deadliest cancer by 2030. it hits fast and hard, leaving families devastated by watching their loved one die quickly and in pain. only 10 per cent of those diagnosed will survive five years while 70 per cent die within the first year.
“one of his biggest fears was that he was dying young enough that he was going to be forgotten. and we all know that that’s impossible and not true,” sarah explains of honouring him by telling his story, loudly, to help others fight for better odds of survival. november is pancreatic cancer awareness month.
there were moments where david and sarah still laughed and cried, and he really wanted his last act to be recording the story of his death, she says of the plan for the podcast series.
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“other people shouldn’t be worrying about that. other people shouldn’t be worrying if they’ve left their kids and their wife and their family with enough memories for them not to be forgotten.”
david was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2021. the whole family hadn’t gotten together much because of the pandemic, but they surprised sarah’s mom for her 75th birthday. “me and my husband and kids drove up to surprise her. that was in august and i saw him then,” she recalls of seeing david looking well as usual. “we were only in town for a couple of days, but the whole family was together. it was great. everything felt very, very normal,” she says. just a couple weeks later, she was talking to her dad who mentioned they were waiting on david’s tests, which was the first she’d heard of anything going on with her brother’s health.