“I brought my daughter into the world and took her out of it.”
Those were the words that echoed in my mind as I sat beside Deborah’s bed, holding her hand in the final quiet hours of her life. There is no handbook for moments like that — no guide for how to sit with your child as she slips from one world into the next. You’re not supposed to outlive your child. You’re not supposed to watch them shrink inside hospital gowns, or whisper goodbyes you prayed you’d never have to say. You’re not supposed to wear the same expression of calm strength you once had when they were born, only now it’s not strength ushering in a life, but strength guiding one out.
Deborah’s hand in mine felt smaller than I ever remembered. Her once-vibrant fingers, the same fingers that had tied her children’s shoelaces, written thousands of blog posts, typed messages of hope to strangers, and held onto life with a ferocity that inspired millions — now lay still, warm only because mine covered them. She was in that strange space between here and gone, where breathing is shallow and time, somehow, stretches and collapses all at once.
A mix of sadness and relief washed over me. Sadness, because losing her felt like losing part of myself — a part I had carried, loved, raised, and watched grow into an extraordinary woman. Relief, because her pain was unbearable to witness. Five and a half years of surgeries, chemo, setbacks, small triumphs, new protocols, bouts of hope, and devastating results. Five and a half years of living with death tapping on her shoulder, always close, always waiting.
And still, she fought. Oh, how she fought.
She fought for her children, Hugo and Eloise, who were only 16 and 14 when they lost their mother. She fought for her husband. She fought for her friends. She fought for strangers. And she fought for herself — though she rarely admitted that part, always humble, always putting others ahead of her.
She fought even when stage 4 bowel cancer tried every trick in the book to steal her joy.
She fought with humor, with honesty, with a brutal transparency that made others feel less alone.
She fought until fighting was no longer something the body could do.
When Deborah first told me she was experiencing symptoms — fatigue, bloating, inconsistent bowel habits — she brushed them off. “I’m too young for bowel cancer,” she said. And at 35, who wouldn’t think that? Mothers of three-year-olds don’t consider cancer. Women training for marathons don’t think about tumors. People who say, “I’ll go to the doctor if it doesn’t get better” don’t imagine a day when their doctor will sit them down, look into their eyes, and say, “We found something.”
But that day came.
I still remember the phone call. Her voice, usually full of life and movement and excitement, felt hollow.
“Mum… they found cancer. Stage 4.”
Stage 4.
How can two words carry so much weight?
So much fear.
So much finality.
My first instinct was to tell her everything would be okay, to reassure her like I did when she scraped her knee at eight years old or had her heart broken at twenty. But cancer isn’t a scraped knee. Cancer isn’t something you kiss better. Cancer doesn’t care how old you are, how loved you are, how much you still have left to do.
Deborah didn’t want pity. She wanted purpose.
She started her Bowelbabe blog in the most Deborah way possible — bold, funny, unfiltered, determined. She took a disease that tries to make people shrink and turned it into a mission that helped people stand taller. She shared the indignity of symptoms, the emotional roller coasters, the surgeries, the chemo cycles, and the moments of dark fear. She did not sugarcoat anything. She didn’t pretend. She didn’t hide.
She made people feel seen.
She made people go to the doctor.
She saved lives.
Her advocacy work became her armor. Every message from someone who caught their cancer early because of her posts gave her strength. Every person who said “Because of you, I didn’t ignore the signs” made her feel that something good could come from her suffering. Deborah found meaning in the unthinkable — and in doing so, she became a lighthouse for others navigating storms they never asked for.
And through it all, she was still Mum.
Still the woman laughing loudest at family dinners.
Still the woman who held her children close, even when it hurt her to do so.
Still the woman who posted photos in bright dresses even when she could barely stand.
Still the woman determined to make memories before time ran out.
The deterioration came gradually at first. A failed treatment here. A new tumor there. Pain that came back quicker every cycle. More appointments. More hospital stays. More emotions that sat unspoken between us.
Then, near the end, everything sped up.
Her body became frail. Her energy evaporated. Her skin grew pale. The sparkle in her eyes dimmed, though never fully disappeared — Deborah was too stubborn to let cancer extinguish that.
When hospice was mentioned, she didn’t cry. She just looked at me and said, “Mum, I don’t want them to be scared. Promise me we’ll keep things light.”
Light. She wanted light in the room where she would die. She wanted laughter. She wanted the children to visit without fear. She wanted to be remembered smiling.
That was Deborah.
She carried sunshine into even the bleakest rooms.
The final days were peaceful in a way I didn’t expect. She slept more. Ate little. Spoke softly. But when she was awake, she held my hand with surprising clarity, as though she knew she needed to squeeze life into those final hours.
She didn’t talk about dying.
She talked about the kids.
She talked about future birthdays she knew she wouldn’t see.
She talked about making sure they knew how loved they were.
She talked about resilience.
She talked about hope.
And then she drifted into longer sleeps, deeper breaths, softer movements.
Until that morning.
The morning where everything suddenly felt both unbearably heavy and unbearably fragile.
I held her hand — the same hand I held when she was born — and whispered, “It’s okay, sweetheart. You can rest.”
She took one last breath, a long, gentle sigh that felt like both a goodbye and a release.
And just like that, she was free.
People often ask me how I am coping. I never know how to answer. Grief isn’t linear. It isn’t tidy. It doesn’t arrive politely or depart fully. It comes in waves — some small and soft, others crashing so violently they take your breath away.
But I cope because I have reminders of her everywhere.
I cope because I hear her laughter when Hugo cracks a joke.
Because I see her determination in Eloise’s eyes.
Because I feel her love in the smallest moments — a cup of tea, a ray of sunlight, a silly meme she would have loved.
I cope because I have to.
Because her children need me.
Because she would have hated to see me crumble.
And I cope because Deborah showed me how.
She showed me that even in unbearable circumstances, you can choose to squeeze joy out of life. You can choose to advocate. To help others. To create something meaningful from something tragic.
Her legacy is not just her blog.
Not just her advocacy.
Not just the countless people she educated, inspired, or encouraged.
Her legacy is love.
Love that spreads beyond her family, beyond her community, beyond her own story.
Love that continues to ripple outward.
I often think back to the exact moment she was born — the moment I first held her, tiny and pink and crying. I remember thinking, This is the greatest moment of my life. The first of many. The beginning of everything.
And then, decades later, as I held her hand at the end, I thought the same thing in a different way. This is the greatest honor of my life. To be here. To guide her. To love her all the way through.
“I brought my daughter into the world,” I whispered that day, “and I took her out of it.”
It wasn’t meant to sound tragic. It was meant to sound full. Complete. A circle closing exactly as it had opened — with love, with grace, with tenderness.
Deborah lived with intensity and purpose.
She died with dignity and peace.
And in between those two points, she gave the world everything she could.
I will spend the rest of my life honoring that.
Loving her children like she would want.
Carrying her message forward.
Reminding others to listen to their bodies.
To advocate for themselves.
To live boldly even when life is unfair.
Deborah taught me that you don’t measure a life in years.
You measure it in impact.
In courage.
In the people you touch.
In the love you give.
And by that measure, her life — though far too short — was immeasurably large.
