June is Bowel Cancer Awareness month, and survivors want Australians to know it's not just an 'old person's disease'. Hollie Owens shares her story of surviving bowel cancer after being diagnosed at 24.
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00:00 Hearing those words, "You have cancer," it's very--
00:03 it's kind of like your whole world just stops.
00:06 And you just go into this emptiness.
00:10 It's a weird feeling.
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00:43 Prior to my diagnosis, I presented to the GP
00:48 multiple times to just be told it was IBS or girl problems.
00:52 Took me over two years to get diagnosed,
00:55 because bowel cancer was never something
00:57 that I guess anybody would assume a 24-year-old would get.
01:01 Once you get through the cancer, it's like, who am I now?
01:05 Like, I've got this body that's got scars.
01:07 I've got these side effects.
01:09 I don't know who I am.
01:11 Everybody else's life is still going on.
01:13 Like, you feel lost.
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01:18 And if I didn't advocate for myself,
01:27 I probably wouldn't be alive today.
01:29 And that's the thing is that--
01:31 I guess my big message to me is, like, you've
01:33 got to advocate for yourself.
01:35 Because if you don't speak up for yourself,
01:37 if you don't persist, nobody else is going to do it for you.
01:40 And if you feel like within yourself something's not right
01:43 and a doctor's not hearing you, you
01:45 need to keep pushing until somebody will listen to you.
01:48 You don't know what you can do until you're in or faced
01:52 an adversity like that.
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01:59 It's important, though, because we've
02:17 got rising rates of bowel cancer in people under the age of 50.
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