Cross country feature: Back on course
Steve Virgen
Two roads diverged in a wood And I took the one less traveled by
And that has made all the difference -- Robert Frost
Passion does not come by chance. Passion is not a gift. Matt Doyle is
the evidence.
His life indicates loss breeds desire, the will to overcome. When
doctors discovered a tumor the size of a cantaloupe that took up half of
his left lung, Doyle prepared for a long and hilly road. The Newport
Harbor High junior, who is on the Sailors’ junior varsity cross country
team, wondered if he would ever run again. Stunned, he wondered if he
would ever breathe again.
“I was shocked to find out that I got the tumor,” said Doyle, who
earned the Special Achievement Award in the Mt. San Antonio College
Invitational Saturday. “The first thing I asked was, ‘ Will I be able to
run?’ The doctor told me (a week after surgery) that I wouldn’t be able
to run for another two years. I proved him wrong.”
*
Doyle became ill in October, 2000. Pneumonia weakened his body and he
could not run. He knew he had to visit the doctor’s office. And that’s
when the tumor was found.
The tumor was lymphatic and in its teratoma stage (teratoma, from the
Greek teratos which means monster, as in monstrous growth), growing to
half the size of his left lung. Doctors had to act fast as the tumor
pushed at Doyle’s heart and his lung was collapsing. At Fountain Valley
Regional Hospital, surgeons did not want to perform surgery on Doyle’s
birthday, Nov. 4, so they did it the day before.
Over one month, Doyle endured three biopsies and then one surgery to
remove the tumor and, hopefully, all the cancer. After the first biopsy,
when living tissue is removed for examination, doctors discovered the
tumor was malignant or in its end stage. This meant when the tumor would
be taken out, the cancer would remain.
With the second biopsy, the diagnosis changed. The tumor was not
malignant. It was mature, a grade lower than malignant.
The third biopsy, the extraction of a portion of the tumor, which
doctors said rarely grows in the lung, revealed the growth weighed three
pounds and had caused internal bleeding. The results pressed the surgeons
to go to work.
To think, Doyle had lived his entire life with this tumor. It was only
until he hit puberty, that the cells formed the tumor and it began to
grow ... and grow. He said he looked in amazement as doctors revealed the
pictures of the growth inside him.
“It freaked me out,” Doyle said.
Then came the surgery.
The muscles in his arms and legs atrophied to the point that he
possessed very little strength.
There was also the risk of death during surgery. In addition, there
was no promise all the cancer would be removed. In fact, doctors expected
Doyle would be left with traces of cancer, even with the tumor gone.
But Doyle beat the odds.
“We had a miracle,” said Doyle’s mother, Kim, who slept in a chair at
her child’s side before and after the surgery, for more than two months.
“When they did the final surgery and took the tumor out, they couldn’t
find cancer. The doctors couldn’t explain that. I’m taking it as a
miracle.”
*
On Nov. 4, Doyle will celebrate his 17th birthday. Last year, was
hardly a celebration. Amid the rehabilitation from the surgery, Doyle
learned that his most cherished activity would be stripped from him for
the next two years. Half of his lung was gone, so doctors advised light
activity in Doyle’s rehabilitation. He would not be able to run cross
country. But Doyle would have none of that.
“I thought, ‘I’m still going to run,’ ” Doyle said. “I’m not going to
listen to him. But, I was so worried about not being able to run, because
I like running so much. It just makes me feel good when I run. I just
like the feel of when I keep going and going and going.”
Doyle immediately focused on a comeback. He received support from his
brother Nick, 12, sister Sarah, 10, and his mother, a single parent the
past three years.
Also, Doyle’s Newport Harbor teammates and Coach Bim Barry visited him
during his rehabilitation, providing added inspiration.
A year later, Doyle is back on course. Now, it’s his strides that are
providing inspiration for the Sailors. Doyle’s first meet back was the
Sea View League Invitational, the last meet he competed in before the
tumor was discovered. Last week, he completed the notably difficult Mt.
SAC cross country course and won the Special Achievement Award.
“I wouldn’t be the same if I was in his situation,” Barry said. “I
wouldn’t be doing what he is doing. I would probably be feeling sorry for
myself.”
Kim Doyle has also been inspired by her son’s recovery.
“I cry every time he takes off, because I have him back,” she said.
“Especially from seeing him not being able to breathe, and he was
bleeding, hooked up to all the monitors ... to see him running now is
quite incredible.”
*
When Doyle lifts his left arm, the scars near his ribs are visible.
That doesn’t matter to Doyle because, he says, the cancer is gone. He
undergoes a monthly CT scan to determine whether the tumor has returned.
However, in Doyle’s mind, the cancer will never come back. The thought
keeps his legs moving today as he runs in a Sea View League meet at
Woodbridge. His three-mile times average about 30 minutes, but
championships are not his quest. Finishing races and competing on the
varsity squad next year are his goals.
He said he has learned to cherish life more because of what he has
been through the past year and those experiences motivate him in each
race.
“For me, it’s all about finishing the race because they told me I
wouldn’t be able to finish races,” Doyle said. “They told me I wouldn’t
run.”
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