Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Fundraising

On Thursday we went to Wigan.

Philip was organising a concert in aid of Prof's work and we didn't want to miss it. We'd first met Philip when he staggered down the corridor to see us, during the first week of the first round of Quent's treatment. Philip was already on his top up and gave us enormous hope as he told us it was all worth it. (We called him "Philip-the-success-story" in those days). He is a lovely man and we've become great friends with him and his equally lovely wife Sue. There's a special bond between us that we don't (and hopefully won't ever) share with any of our other friends. Not exactly John McCarthy and Brian Keenan, but certainly a shared experience of some of the less pleasant moments in life.

The concert was fantastic - Wigan Jazz Youth Orchestra - and worth the 6 hour drive up the M6. (Why are there always accidents between J19 and 21?) Prof was there with his wife, Helen - it was great to meet Helen and to see Prof outside the Christie. I urged him to have a glass of red wine and he took his medicine well - he was probably hoping I would show his talent for encouraging extra doses. Angela, one of the nurses from Nathan House, was also there and greeted Quentin with a cheery "You were the worst IL-2 patient we ever had". (In terms of bizarre side effects.)

The week before, we had been to another Christie's do. In London this time. The hospital wanted to show the medical trust funds that they were a national centre of excellence, worthy of large research grants. We agreed to speak - a "customer voice", telling the story of someone who preferred the Christie to the Marsden. The fact that the treatment was so successful and that Quent had raised money himself for the cause was a bonus - as was the cute, blond toddler in the slideshow. We mixed the family shots with a few gruesome ones of Quent mid-treatment to ensure we tugged on a range of emotional heartstrings.

The draw for the wealthy patrons was an audience with Jenni Murray and Alan Bennett - and so I found myself doing a monologue before the great man himself. It went OK, but I don't think Thora Hurd ever got choked mid-performance, so we're not expecting the phone to ring.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Jenny H said...

Any contact from Mr Bennett yet? He may not like the threat of competition in his field!

Glad to see the Webb Roadshow is still going strong. Don't quite know how you manage to fit it all in.

Love Jen H xxx

Thursday, July 16, 2009 7:19:00 am  

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