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London recruitment manager claims yoga helped him beat cancer

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London recruitment manager claims yoga helped him beat cancer
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London recruitment manager claims yoga helped him beat cancer

2018-10-10 16:52 Last Updated At:16:52

Tom Harper became a self-titled “cancer Viking,” battling the devastating effects of the disease and its treatment through rigorous exercise.

A “cancer Viking” claims to have beaten the disease by “battling its dark forces” with yoga and aggressive exercise, in the spirit of the feared Norse pirates – running a half-marathon during chemotherapy.

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Tom pictured on the day he was diagnosed with cancer in October 2016 (PA photo)

Tom Harper became a self-titled “cancer Viking,” battling the devastating effects of the disease and its treatment through rigorous exercise.

Tom's Viking beard (PA photo)

He continued: “I just developed this blind and dogged determination. In my mind I started to think of myself as a ‘cancer Viking,’ battling against the ethereal and dark forces of cancer.”

Tom weight training during his treatment (PA photo)

“All my body hair fell out apart from the hair on my face. That’s where I got the Viking idea from,” said Tom, who is single.

Tom during one of the worst periods of his treatment (PA photo)

He added: “I felt like no matter what they threw at me with the treatment, I would be able to take it.”

Tom in London Bridge Hospital (PA photo)

But when he started losing to opponents he would normally beat hands down, Tom suspected his aches and pains could be more serious.

Tom during one of the worst periods of his treatment (PA photo)

“I started becoming sick more and more frequently. At first, I told myself it was food poisoning, but it started happening so often that it became increasingly clear that something was really wrong.”

Tom having completed the Hackney half-marathon (PA photo)

Despite the intensive treatment, Tom vowed to maintain his fitness and complete an hour and a half yoga session every day.

Tom's Viking beard (PA photo)

He added: “I didn’t want to be lying in bed and letting the cancer bring me down. I wanted to be up and at it and feeling like I was doing something to fight it off.”

Tom lost all of his body hair, including his beard, during immunotherapy (PA photo)

“I would meditate regularly, also repeating mantras about healing and strength over and over in my head.

Tom back at work in March of this year (PA photo)

“At that point, it was the stage where they begin saying that they will try to make you as comfortable as possible,” he recalled.

Tom on holiday in Greece during his treatment (PA photo)

“Men tend to be more buttoned up about these things than women and it was fantastic to find a group where I was able to discuss my treatment and the effect it was having on me.”

Tom at a wedding in California in August 2018 (PA photo)

“Everyone thought I was mad to do it, and obviously I was very carefully monitored throughout,” he said.

Tom at a wedding in California in August 2018 (PA photo)

Tom has now returned to work and also volunteers for Look Good Feel Better and for Lymphoma Action – after his half-marathon raised £5,000 for them,

Diagnosed with grey zone lymphoma, a rare and aggressive cancer of the immune system, in October 2016, recruitment manager Tom Harper, 32, from Peckham, south east London was at one point given just a 15 per cent chance of survival.

Claiming the cancer “robbed him” of 18 months of his life, Tom, who doctors discovered had tumours all over his body, including an orange-sized growth on his lung, said: “When something like that happens, you have two options – you either die or you fight it.”

Tom pictured on the day he was diagnosed with cancer in October 2016 (PA photo)

Tom pictured on the day he was diagnosed with cancer in October 2016 (PA photo)

He continued: “I just developed this blind and dogged determination. In my mind I started to think of myself as a ‘cancer Viking,’ battling against the ethereal and dark forces of cancer.”

A keen martial artist since childhood, Tom was committed to doing as much physical activity as possible, even during “intensive and gruelling” treatment despite concerns expressed by medical professionals and exercise coaches.

Yoga became his salvation, helping him to cope with the devastating effects of both the cancer and the chemotherapy, which caused him to lose all his hair, except for his beard.

Tom's Viking beard (PA photo)

Tom's Viking beard (PA photo)

“All my body hair fell out apart from the hair on my face. That’s where I got the Viking idea from,” said Tom, who is single.

“I thought, ‘If I can’t grow any other hair, I’m going to grow the only part I can as much as possible!’

“Pushing my body with yoga and exercise benefited me enormously.”

Tom weight training during his treatment (PA photo)

Tom weight training during his treatment (PA photo)

He added: “I felt like no matter what they threw at me with the treatment, I would be able to take it.”

Tom first realised something was wrong in February 2016, when he developed lingering pains in his back.

Regularly practising Krav Maga, a form of self-defence training, he was super-fit, so assumed the pains were merely the result of his intensive martial arts work outs and fights.

Tom during one of the worst periods of his treatment (PA photo)

Tom during one of the worst periods of his treatment (PA photo)

But when he started losing to opponents he would normally beat hands down, Tom suspected his aches and pains could be more serious.

Repeated trips to the GP proved inconclusive, but all the while Tom was becoming weaker and weaker.

“I would get these night sweats and wake up in the middle of the night with my sheets utterly drenched,” he recalled.

Tom in London Bridge Hospital (PA photo)

Tom in London Bridge Hospital (PA photo)

“I started becoming sick more and more frequently. At first, I told myself it was food poisoning, but it started happening so often that it became increasingly clear that something was really wrong.”

And in October 2016, after 13 visits to the doctor, Tom’s worst fears were confirmed when a large lump was found in his neck, leading to a diagnosis of lymphoma.

Prescribed six rounds of chemotherapy at the private London Bridge Hospital, where his treatment was covered by medical insurance, doctors hoped to blitz the tumours that were soon in all parts of his body – the biggest being a 13 cm wide growth on his lung.

Tom during one of the worst periods of his treatment (PA photo)

Tom during one of the worst periods of his treatment (PA photo)

Despite the intensive treatment, Tom vowed to maintain his fitness and complete an hour and a half yoga session every day.

“One of the best pieces of advice I was given, was from a doctor who said, ‘If you act like a patient, you’ll become a patient,’ he said.

“So, I tried to be as active as possible. Every day I’d get up, have a shower and go for a walk.”

Tom having completed the Hackney half-marathon (PA photo)

Tom having completed the Hackney half-marathon (PA photo)

He added: “I didn’t want to be lying in bed and letting the cancer bring me down. I wanted to be up and at it and feeling like I was doing something to fight it off.”

Amazingly, in January 2017, when Tom was at his worst, he completed a 30 day yoga challenge, performing the stretching and deep breathing discipline each day despite having just had five months of powerful chemo.

“It helped to build up my mental resilience,” explained Tom.

Tom's Viking beard (PA photo)

Tom's Viking beard (PA photo)

“I would meditate regularly, also repeating mantras about healing and strength over and over in my head.

“The words would wash over and relax me. It was like having a cool, damp cloth wiped over your forehead.”

But to Tom’s horror, a scan in April 2017, following six bouts of chemotherapy, revealed that all his efforts had been in vain, as the tumours had not shrunk at all.

Tom lost all of his body hair, including his beard, during immunotherapy (PA photo)

Tom lost all of his body hair, including his beard, during immunotherapy (PA photo)

“At that point, it was the stage where they begin saying that they will try to make you as comfortable as possible,” he recalled.

“But I thought, ‘No, I’m not just going to slip away. I’m going to keep going until I beat it.'”

As his chemotherapy had failed, in April 2017 doctors put Tom on a 12-month course of immunotherapy, a radical form of cancer treatment that targets the enzymes on the tumours.

Claiming this was the worst period of all his treatment, Tom said his physical appearance changed drastically and he even lost the Viking beard that he had so cherished.

Now entirely bald and with a deathly white palour, Tom, “looking like a ghost”, sought support from the charity Look Good Feel Better, which helps people to manage the visible side effects of cancer.

“There aren’t many places where men can discuss cancer,” explained Tom.

Tom back at work in March of this year (PA photo)

Tom back at work in March of this year (PA photo)

“Men tend to be more buttoned up about these things than women and it was fantastic to find a group where I was able to discuss my treatment and the effect it was having on me.”

Thankfully, Tom’s £15,000-per-dose immunotherapy, which was again covered by his insurance, began to work and, after 14 bouts he was declared cancer free.

And, after his gruelling physical regime had given him so much physical and mental strength throughout his ordeal, he decided to run the Hackney half-marathon around North East London in May this year.

Tom on holiday in Greece during his treatment (PA photo)

Tom on holiday in Greece during his treatment (PA photo)

“Everyone thought I was mad to do it, and obviously I was very carefully monitored throughout,” he said.

“It was also pretty tough, as essentially I had just one lung after the cancer pretty much wiped out the other one and, throughout the run, it felt like someone was stabbing me in the back with a knife.

“But I managed it all the same.”

Tom at a wedding in California in August 2018 (PA photo)

Tom at a wedding in California in August 2018 (PA photo)

Tom has now returned to work and also volunteers for Look Good Feel Better and for Lymphoma Action – after his half-marathon raised £5,000 for them,

Continuing with his yoga and daily meditation, he is slowly getting his life back after a year and a half of thinking each day could be his last.

“I don’t sweat about the small stuff anymore,” he said.

Tom at a wedding in California in August 2018 (PA photo)

Tom at a wedding in California in August 2018 (PA photo)

“Knowing you could be dead at any moment for 18 months really focuses your mind on what’s important. Now I feel much more uninhibited and happily express my feelings, making sure my family and friends know I love them.”

Sarah Porch, head of information and support services at cancer charity Bloodwise, said: “Although we know that staying active may help people with blood cancer, particularly with managing fatigue, there’s no evidence that any particular exercise programme can improve your condition or how you respond to treatment.

“It’s important to talk to your doctor about an appropriate level of exercise if you’ve been diagnosed with blood cancer.”

LONDON (AP) — Two military horses that bolted and ran miles through the streets of London after being spooked by construction noise and tossing their riders were in serious condition Thursday after undergoing operations, a U.K. government official said.

The animals were among a group of four horses that broke free during routine exercises Wednesday near Buckingham Palace and caused chaos as they galloped loose through central London during morning rush hour. A fifth horse tried to bolt but couldn't break free.

“Three of them are fine, two of them are unfortunately in a relatively serious condition and obviously we will be monitoring that condition,” defense minister James Cartlidge told Sky News. “They are in a serious condition, but as I understand, still alive.”

Three soldiers thrown from their steeds were hospitalized with injuries, but were expected to fully recover and return to work.

The British Army said three of the horses were expected to return to duty, but the fate of the two with the worst injuries was unclear.

Neither was believed to have broken bones, but a horse named Quaker was transferred to an equine hospital for specialist care, an army spokesperson said.

Vida, a white horse seen drenched in blood as it galloped down Aldwych, in between London’s historic financial center and the busy West End theater district, was treated for lacerations.

“Vida was the most visibly injured and the pictures of the horse running through London soaked in blood were horrifying," the army said in a statement.

The other loose horses from the Household Cavalry, the ceremonial guard of the monarch and a feature of state functions in London, are named Trojan and Tennyson.

During the wild spectacle captured by stunned commuters and shared on social media, the horses had near misses with cyclists and a rider on a motorbike at a traffic light.

Vida ran alongside Trojan, a black horse that could be seen sideswiping a taxi as it turned into oncoming traffic after running through a red light at an intersection.

One of the animals shattered the windows of a taxi it struck outside the Clermont Hotel and another smashed a windshield when it slammed into a tour bus.

Two of the horses were corralled at Limehouse about 5 miles (8 kilometers) from where they bolted. All the captured horses were taken back to barracks in Hyde Park.

Cartlidge said the army trains with about 150 horses every day, so the incident was exceptionally rare.

“Unfortunately we have seen what has happened, but all I can say is the crucial thing ... no serious injuries to the public as far as we aware, and of course we will be keeping an eye on the situation,” he told LBC.

The horses had been training for an upcoming military parade and were spooked by the crashing sound of construction materials at a work site in Belgravia, a swanky neighborhood just to the west of the palace, said Matt Woodward, commanding officer of the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment.

A day after the incident, more than 150 horses and close to 200 participants took part in the regiment's annual inspection at Hyde Park to demonstrate readiness for summer pageantry including Trooping the Color and state visits.

A small crowd gathered as mounted riders, dressed in black, red and gold uniforms with golden helmets, trotted to the beat of a brass band.

This story has been corrected to show that the black horse seen running with a bloody horse was named Trojan, not Quaker.

A horse collides with a taxi in London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. Several military horses bolted during routine exercises near King Charles III's main residence in London on Wednesday and ran loose through the center of the city, injuring at least four people and colliding with vehicles during the morning rush hour. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

A horse collides with a taxi in London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. Several military horses bolted during routine exercises near King Charles III's main residence in London on Wednesday and ran loose through the center of the city, injuring at least four people and colliding with vehicles during the morning rush hour. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

A white horse on the loose bolts through the streets of London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

A white horse on the loose bolts through the streets of London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

Two horses on the loose bolt through the streets of London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

Two horses on the loose bolt through the streets of London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

Two horses on the loose bolt through the streets of London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

Two horses on the loose bolt through the streets of London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

A white horse on the loose bolt through the streets of London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

A white horse on the loose bolt through the streets of London near Aldwych, on Wednesday April 24, 2024. (Jordan Pettitt/PA via AP)

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