Touching film tribute to teen whose 'sports injury' was terminal cancer

Lulu Blundell believed she had a sporting injury but it turned out she had incurable tumours in her body

Lulu Blundell

Lulu Blundell died after being diagnosed with cancer (Image: Teenage Cancer Trust)

A moving short film has been released paying tribute to a teenager who died after being diagnosed with bone cancer. 

Lulu Blundell, 19, died on New Year's Day, four years after she was diagnosed with Ewing's Sarcoma. After receiving the news, she underwent eight months of intense chemotherapy 24 hours a day, for seven days every fortnight.

However, after having to have her leg amputated, Lulu was told she was cancer free. Then, last April Lulu, the student at Newcastle University felt a pain in her shoulder. 

She initially shrugged it off as a sporting injury. But after a consultant arranged a CT scan, Lulu was told she had tumours in her shoulder, ribs and chest, and that the cancer was terminal, reports YorkshireLive.

A film, Lulu: Forever 19, has now been released as part of Teenage Cancer Trust’s #talkaboutdying campaign. It sees Lulu’s own inspiring words and reflections on living with cancer and a terminal diagnosis read out by her mother Carolyn.

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Lulu and her mum Carolyn Blundell

Lulu and her mum Carolyn Blundell (Image: Teenage Cancer Trust)

Lulu’s mum Carolyn Blundell, said: “There was a lot more to Lulu than her cancer. She was a normal teenager, not a geeky goody two shoes.

"She had a lust for life, for people, and a spontaneity that was infectious - if she wanted to do something, she did it.
“Lulu’s specialists said that further chemo could buy her a little bit more time but that’s not what she wanted - she said she didn’t want to spend any of the time that she had left in a hospital bed.
“Danielle, her Teenage Cancer Trust Nurse, and NHS staff working at the charity’s units in Newcastle and Sheffield, went above and beyond to make sure she could do the things she wanted in the time she had left– like go to Glastonbury. Things that might seem simple but take a lot of planning when somebody is unwell.

“She went to the festival with her friends on a ton of pain relief – it was all arranged so that she could store and take it in the first aid tent. Had she become really unwell she wouldn’t have had to go to A&E, a named contact at the local hospital had been briefed about her whole history and was on hand if needed.”

Last summer Lulu was also able to visit Magaluf with four friends, Amsterdam with her boyfriend Paddy, and enjoyed family trips to London, Northumberland and Manchester. Carolyn said: “People say they are changed after seeing how she lived, especially in the last six months of her life.

"They got that tattoo they always wanted or booked a holiday. ‘Living like Lulu’ has become a bit of a mantra for so many.”

The film shows the emotional moment Lulu crossed the line at her Run with Lulu event last September, a charity 5k she organised with her family and rugby club to raise money for Teenage Cancer Trust. Lulu ran the event on her prosthetic with a broken shoulder blade, as the tumour had become so large, but raised more than £21k to support other young people with cancer.

However, weeks after the Run with Lulu event, a scan showed that Lulu’s cancer had spread more quickly than expected, and that she had months to live, not years as previously hoped. In October and November, Lulu was still able to get out of bed and do one thing a day she wanted. But by December she was too unwell to leave her house.

Carolyn said: “When you realise that you have so little time with someone you become really present in the moment. Right through last summer, and especially after we found out the cancer had spread, we basked in every little thing we did together.

"You can’t manufacture that situation and there were moments of spectacularly pure beauty and love. Even memories of watching Love Island with Lulu, her brother Seth and Paddy, are really precious.

“But nothing could have prepared us for those last few weeks. We didn’t think she’d make it to Christmas, but she wanted to show Robin, her oncology consultant, that she’d get to 2023, and she made it to New Year’s Day.”

Lulu died at home, with her family and loved ones at her side. As part of the #talkaboutdying campaign, Teenage Cancer Trust has worked with its frontline workers to produce new online resources to help young people talk about receiving a terminal cancer diagnosis.

Carolyn said: “During her treatment and when it was found Lulu’s cancer was terminal, we had so many difficult conversations as a family, and Teenage Cancer Trust and her team helped facilitate those.

“Discussing the arrangements for her to die at home, helping her choose the spot where she wanted to be buried, and talking about her plans for the celebration she wanted after her death was so hard. We needed that support.

“We will never stop grieving for Lulu but knowing that she was able to express what she wanted and being able to fulfil those wishes brings us some comfort.”

Lulu raised over £95k for Teenage Cancer Trust, and Carolyn and her loved ones continue to fundraise in her memory. They hope to hit their £100k target this year.

Carolyn said: “It's really important to me that something positive comes out of everything Lulu went through, which is why sharing my story means so much, and why we’re finishing off the fundraising Lulu started for Teenage Cancer Trust.

“If sharing Lulu’s story and our fundraising helps another young person or their family then we can take some comfort from that - it is too impossible to think no good can come from this tragedy and this is my driver to carry on, regardless of how long that takes.”

Dr Louise Soanes, Chief Nurse, Teenage Cancer Trust, said: “We are so thankful to Lulu and her family for their fundraising and sharing their story, which will help so many other young people with cancer.

“No parent wants to ever imagine having to help their child come to terms with a terminal diagnosis, plan where they’d prefer to die, or their funeral, but these are the difficult conversations that are needed to be had every day across the UK for many young people with cancer and their loved ones.

“We are proud that our incredible nurses and youth support teams work every day to support young people and their loved ones in this situation, because talking about dying is important, and no wishes or worries any young person has towards the end of their life have should go unspoken.”

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