00:00 [BIRDS CHIRPING]
00:05 I'm Tommy.
00:06 For the last 10 years, I have been living with a brain tumor.
00:10 I've gone through three surgeries
00:11 on the tumor which is sitting on my pituitary gland.
00:15 They've removed it three times, and it's always grown back
00:18 a little bit there.
00:20 But because it's been sitting on my pituitary,
00:23 it's been affecting one of my hormones.
00:25 It's something that, at the beginning, was really tough,
00:28 having to go to the hospital every six weeks,
00:30 having daily injections, having monthly medicines
00:35 kind of prodded or poked all the time, lots of blood tests,
00:37 lots of living out of hospitals and seeing
00:40 various clinicians and consultants isn't the easiest.
00:43 But I think over time, you kind of get used to it,
00:46 and you get into a bit of a daily rhythm or a monthly
00:48 rhythm or all those kinds of stuff there,
00:50 and you just become used to it.
00:52 It's certainly difficult if you have a change or something new
00:55 comes in.
00:55 Then that's when it becomes really tricky,
00:57 because it always affects your sleep,
00:59 or it affects your migraines, or it affects something else
01:02 in your life that you had spent the last six weeks
01:05 getting used to.
01:06 So very early on, so from about two or three weeks
01:10 after my first surgery, about 10 years ago,
01:13 I was told I couldn't do contact sport anymore.
01:15 So I had to stop playing football, which was obviously
01:17 a big part of my life through all of my teens
01:20 and into my early 20s.
01:21 So I had to stop that and anything else I had to do there.
01:24 So that's when I took up the triathlon and the cycling
01:27 and the swimming areas of my life there.
01:29 So that was probably the hardest change at that point
01:33 was to stop that football that I loved
01:35 and I did all the time.
01:36 The operations are kind of done now.
01:37 The tumor's at a point where it's
01:39 at that tipping point between it being safe to do so,
01:44 but not mitigating too much of the other factors there.
01:47 So they're not going to do any more surgeries on there.
01:49 I've just started some new medication, which
01:51 is a daily injection, which hopefully
01:54 is going to manage my growth hormone, which
01:56 is the particularly one that most people are worried about.
01:59 And hopefully, an ongoing management of that
02:02 will work until such time that I need radiotherapy
02:06 and start my radiotherapy.
02:08 - Okay.
02:09 [BLANK_AUDIO]
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