and to cut expenses. We paid the bills that needed to be paid the most. I wouldn’t sell my house because I didn’t want my wife to be without a home when I was gone. We were hoping for a miracle.” Don was introduced to a transplant specialist in Saskatoon who told him they would like to see if he would qualify for a lung transplant if he was willing. After many tests, Don was given even more devastating news. He was told he did not qualify for a lung transplant because in addition to his lung disease he also had prostate cancer. He would have to beat cancer and remain cancer-free for two years before he would be considered again. Doctors told him the likelihood that he would live long enough was less than 5%. But 5% was still a chance! “I knew how upset I would be with myself if I didn’t take the chance. Along with my wife and kids, we decided as a family to face the cancer head-on, to stay positive and wish for a miracle.” Knowing Don was on borrowed time, a cancer specialist suggested he try a trial treatment for prostate cancer that could cut his cancer treatment time in half. “The treatment was a success. The time it saved me was critical. It was truly a gift and a miracle,” exclaims Don. Although Don had beat cancer, his lung health was deteriorating quickly. After being placed on the lung transplant waiting list he was told people usually wait two years for a new pair of lungs and that he just didn’t have that kind of time. However just forty-eight hours later Don got the call of his life, a pair of lungs were waiting for him. He was airlifted to the University of Alberta Hospital in Edmonton. Soon after his arrival the doctor approached Don and said two words that made his world stop, “dry run.” A dry run means that the lungs weren’t suitable for Don. Normally when a dry run occurs the patient is sent home to be with family. Don, however, was too sick and moved to a ward of the hospital where he feared he would die. “It was really difficult to be so excited and given so much hope only to have the wind let out of your sails. The worst part of being diagnosed with a terminally ill disease is that you quit dreaming into the future because you know you won’t be there. I didn’t ever lose hope, but I lost my ability to dream. I always hoped for the best. If I had a 1% chance I still had a seat or chair at the table, I believed it could happen, I thought maybe I could have one more miracle,” recalls Don. Five days after arriving in Edmonton on June 19, 2015, Don received yet another miracle. Don was given a life-saving double lung transplant. |