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Edwards on the
Road to Recovery
Colorado’s
Jarrett Edwards was practicing for the Tour event at Clarks Hill Reservoir
when neck soreness from wearing a new helmet caused him to get a check-up.
That led to a diagnosis on March 31st of Hodgkin's disease, a form of
cancer. Left undiagnosed, doctors told him his life expectancy would have
been about 18 months. “That helmet might have saved my life,” he said.
Edwards and wife, Rebecca (high school sweethearts who celebrated their
first wedding anniversary on May 15th) decided on an immediate and
aggressive form of chemotherapy/radiation treatment.
“It’s been a tough road so far, but there’s light at the end of the tunnel,”
the 25-year-old angler said. “We feel really good about it.
“I’m currently through my third chemo, which is the halfway point. I have
three more chemos to go, followed by a month of radiation. It’s always scary
at first and the first chemo just about killed me – literally. I was in the
hospital for a week and a half, and my white blood cell count, which is your
immune system, dropped all the way down to 140 when it’s normally at 6,000.
“Luckily, things are looking up now, and I’m excited to get back in the boat
and do some fishing.”
Edwards has had to endure a torturous chemotherapy treatment every other
Tuesday. With his latest dose of the second-strongest chemo cocktail
available, he said X-rays indicated that the “fist and a half-sized” tumor
near his heart appears to have disappeared.
“I feel so blessed,” he said. “Chemo is really tough. The doctors told me,
‘Just remember that what’s killing you now will heal you in the end.’ I
believe it now. I know I’m going through hell for a reason.”
During his darkest moments, Edwards has gained strength from the bass
fishing community.
“The support from the Tour anglers has been amazing,” he said. “And the fans
– you think you have fans out there, but you don’t really know until
something like this hits home. I’ve gotten 434 emails from fans so far.
“It just brings a tear to your eye knowing that people took five minutes out
of their day to give you a call or send you an email — to know that you have
a lot of support out there. I really rely on those when I have bad days
after chemo. I go back and read them, and suddenly my cancer doesn’t seem
like such a bad thing.”
With the end of his treatments in sight, Edwards is thinking more and more
about fishing.
“I’ve snuck out a few times and just played around on the water,” he
admitted. “The doctors feel by the end of August I can be back in a boat and
out there firing away, so I’m hoping to make one of the Western Opens. I
really look forward to it.
“My goal is to get back to the Opens at the end of this summer, and I really
look forward to getting back on Tour.
“This whole thing changes you. Like it or not, it changes you, and you look
at things a lot differently.”
From BASS
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