'I may have incurable cancer but I'm still lucky'

Family photo Marianne and her daughter who both look like they're blowing a kiss with their eyes shut. Her daughter has brown bobbed hair and Marianne has short fair hair. They are both wearing dangling earrings.  Family photo
Marianne (right) was diagnosed with myeloma when her daughter (left) was just 11

When Marianne Williams was told she had incurable cancer at 43 she knew she had to face it with positivity.

Marianne was diagnosed with myeloma, a type of bone marrow cancer, in November 2017, when her daughter was just 11.

"I count myself lucky," she said. "I'm a positive person and I generally tend to look forward and try to think, 'okay, what's the positive in this?' rather than the negative."

Each year she marks the anniversary of her diagnosis by putting on her Wonder Woman costume, something she ordered from her hospital bed during her early days of her treatment.

Family photo Marianne dressed up as Wonder Woman with a gold headband. She has her hands on her hips wearing a red cape and top with a golden W emblazoned on the front, with a gold belt and Wonder Woman's blue shorts with white stars just out of view. She is standing in front of some wooden cabinet doors.Family photo
Marianne dresses up as Wonder Woman on the anniversary of her diagnosis each year

"I know sometimes in the cancer world no matter what cancer you've got the word positivity can be quite controversial and I don't want to sound flippant about it because for some people they don't feel positive, but I feel like I've got things to look forward to," said Marianne from Corntown in Vale of Glamorgan.

"You can only deal with it in a way that is right for you."

Marianne even managed to find the positive in chemotherapy.

"It's grim, but actually bloody brilliant, I've lost my hair, I haven't got to shave my legs," said Marianne, who is married and has a daughter and two step-children.

"Anything positive is a small win in my opinion."

Family photo A selfie of Marianne with her husband and young daughter. They are by the sea and she and her husband are wearing sunglasses.Family photo
Marianne is married and has a daughter and two step-children

Marianne was 41 when she began feeling unwell.

She had several bouts of tonsillitis, conjunctivitis, urinary tract infections (UTIs), sore throats, colds, a tooth infection and labyrinthitis, an inflammation of the inner ear's labyrinth.

"I woke up in the middle of the night with the room spinning, vomiting, I couldn't get back to bed standing up so had to crawl back to bed on my hands and knees," she said.

"You start thinking, 'okay, there's something's not quite right'."

Marianne said she made countless visits to her GP but tests picked up nothing apart from the fact her white blood cells were a bit high which was attributed to her recent infections.

Then after suffering for days with a UTI, her symptoms worsened.

"My face, head, hand and feet had swollen," she said.

"My stomach was enormous – I looked like I was pregnant. I'd spent the whole week with horrendous migraines, constant vomiting, dizzy spells and pain across my ribs and back."

The mum was sent to hospital where she was told she had kidney failure with just 6% kidney function and had to begin dialysis.

A number of tests followed before she was told she had myeloma.

"The first thing you think when they say 'incurable' is 'am I going to die then? What does that mean? Am I pretty much near death?

"How am I going to tell my little girl? How am I going to tell my family?'."

According to charity Myeloma UK, Marianne's long road to diagnosis is not unique.

It said despite it being the third most common type of blood cancer, one in four people wait more than 10 months for a diagnosis.

While myeloma is incurable, it is treatable in the majority of cases, the charity said.

Treatment generally leads to periods of remission but patients inevitably relapse, requiring further treatment.

Most cases of myeloma are diagnosed at around the age of 70, and cases affecting people under the age of 40 are rare, according to the NHS.

Marianne began a six-month course of chemotherapy within an hour of diagnosis, followed by a stem cell transplant in June 2018.

She has been in remission since then but a recent blood test showed her levels of cancer cells are starting to rise again so at some point she will need more chemotherapy and another stem cell transplant.

Family photo A selfie of Marianne with her husband and daughter taken in a restaurant. Marianne is wearing a cream coat over a black turtleneck jumper, with long silver earrings. Her husband is wearing a blue button up shirt and has short grey hair. Her daughter has longer light brown hair and pearl earrings. Family photo
Marianne says she has prioritised spending time with those she loves since her diagnosis

"One of my biggest hurdles is trying to explain to people that it's going to come back," said Marianne.

"They say, 'well, hopefully it won't' and I say 'well, no, unfortunately it does and it will come back, that is the nature of it'... they hear the word remission, and they think that means that your cancer is gone."

She said her daughter has come up with a good analogy.

"She said, 'mum, it's a bit like a volcano. It's not erupting at the moment, but it's there under the surface… just waiting to erupt again so it is always there'."

Myeloma UK said the life expectancy of myeloma patients had greatly improved over recent years, with an increasing number of new and effective treatment options.

It said just over half of myeloma patients in England will live for at least five years and a third will live for at least 10 years.

List of myeloma red flag symptoms which includes: Persistent or unexplained pain for more than 4-6 weeks particularly in the back or ribs; easily broken bones or unexpected fractures; experiencing frequent urination or minimal to no urination; frequent hard-to-clear infections; swollen legs or abdomen; tiredness that doesn't improve with rest; nosebleeds/unexplained bleeding or bruising; unexplained shortness of breath; unexplained weight loss; numbness in hands feet or legs

"I'm over seven years into it so if it's 10 I could have three years, if it's 20 I've got 13 years," said Marianne.

"You can't put a finite figure on it but you're certainly aware you've got less time than your average person."

She said her diagnosis had given her a new perspective on life and she now spends less time fretting over the little things and instead prioritises special time with those she loves.

Turning 50 last year was a big moment.

"It was a chance to say 'yes, fantastic, I'm here, I'm celebrating this," she said.

Family photo Marianne and her husband at her 50th birthday party. Marianne is wearing a blue strappy dress and her husband is wearing a white short with a blue floral print. There are two balloons - a five and a zero - behind them. Family photo
Marianne said turning 50 last year was a big moment for her

For Marianne, myeloma does not define her.

"I've accepted it... yes, I have it, I live with it, it is always present in your mind, there's not a day goes by that I don't think about it," she said.

"But I'm very lucky that I have the attitude of 'right, let's just crack on with life for now'."