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Andrew's Story |
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Andrew Sprawson |
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Founder, Rebounders Canada |
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In the summer of 1973 at the age of 10, Andrew Sprawson was diagnosed with a brain tumour. From |
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that time on, as it does with all cancer patients, Andrew's life changed irrevocably. |
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Back in those days, medical professionals lacked diagnostic tools such as MRI's and CT scans so |
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Andrew had three surgeries. The first one was exploratory, the second to install a shunt and the third |
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to tackle the tumour. After the surgeries he underwent grueling radiation treatments bound in a body |
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cast designed to hold him still. He spent the whole summer in the hospital but brags that he didn't |
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miss a day of school that fall. |
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Almost immediately after his release from hospital Andrew showed signs of what is called "late effects" |
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directly caused by the radiation treatments he had received. Gradually over time simple things became |
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more difficult and within eight years he had stopped running, riding a bicycle, skating or skiing. It was |
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clear that he wasn't living a typical childhood. |
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By his twenties, Andrew had received some local media attention around his story as a "survivor" of |
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childhood cancer. He established a small business designing and building children's playground |
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equipment. He became preoccupied with his business and for a time his life revolved around work, |
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sleep and not much else. He longed for real friends with similar interests and challenges but even then |
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recognized that his disabilities and history with cancer set him apart from mainstream society. |
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For a time he explored networks such as the Toronto Board of Trade as an avenue for meeting friends. |
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His involvement with the Board of Trade included volunteer work building a dining hall for a camp |
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benefiting children with cancer. It was through the camp that Andrew connected with that cancer |
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organization, but he still found that people seemed more inclined to see his disabilities rather than his |
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abilities. |
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It was in Andrew's 29 th year that late effects made life changes necessary. He started having |
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involuntary muscle movements and increasingly poor balance. His vision and hearing were impaired. |
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Poor motor skills meant he was unable to drive a car. At 30 he underwent surgery to relieve some of |
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the symptoms. |
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With the impact of late effects becoming more obvious Andrew felt increasingly isolated from |
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mainstream society. Losing a lot of his strength and stamina forced him to reassess his priorities. The |
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physical demands of his business grew to be too overwhelming and he closed the operation. He felt |
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more alone and socially isolated than ever before. |
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It was Andrew's father who suggested he might benefit from making friendships with other childhood |
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cancer survivors. The big challenge lay in finding and contacting those survivors. Doctors were unable |
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to provide names due to patient privacy issues. Andrew worked hard to convince Toronto 's |
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Sunnybrook Hospital to mail a letter on his behalf to its now-adult childhood cancer survivors. He also |
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asked childhood cancer support groups to print the letter in their member communications. By |
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providing his own contact information, Andrew's recruitment worked in reverse: he asked cancer |
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survivors to find him! |
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Encouraged by the response after hearing from many fellow childhood cancer survivors, Andrew knew |
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it was time to form an official group. He seized upon the name "Rebounders" to reflect the strength of |
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the survivors' rebounding back to life after staring death in the eye. The group's motto became |
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"Thrive, not just survive" and it was officially founded in 1990. |
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Andrew has now established many friendships through Rebounders Canada, with other individuals who |
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have lived through similar experiences and also those who have not. For many Rebounders, the effects |
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of their cancer or treatment means they cannot function fully in today's fast-paced society. To be part |
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of a network of friends sharing common history but facing many of the
same challenges together has |
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brought a richness to their lives. |
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Andrew's Rebounders story doesn't end there. It was through Rebounders that he met, and in 1997, |
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married Jill, also a childhood cancer survivor. Together they continue to nurture the organization, while |
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also raising two healthy young boys, living true to their motto: Thrive, not just survive! In 2007 the |
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Rotary Club of Upper Oakville honoured Andrew with their Paul Harris Fellow Award for "service above |
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self". |
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Andrew and Jill still serve as volunteer Executive Directors of Rebounders Canada and find themselves |
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busy planning monthly Rebounders programs. Much time is also spent fielding calls from people who |
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seek advice and reassurance that they are not alone in their journeys. He and Jill remain a source of |
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inspiration, both to fellow cancer survivors and also to those unaffected, all of whom admire their |
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strength and dedication. |
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