The decision to be an Ambassador for the Bone Marrow Cancer Trust is deeply personal for Josh. He was just 23 when, in 2011, he was diagnosed with Acute Myeloid Leukaemia, a type of cancer of the blood.
Josh was one of New Zealand’s most promising young athletes, until the sudden diagnosis of acute myeloid leukaemia at the age of 23, a diagnosis that took him on a 10-year battle with leukaemia, deep depression, a second cancer diagnosis, an allogeneic stem cell transplant, a coma, a graft vs host disease, and multiple complications, all while experiencing multiple heart attacks.
During his treatment in Christchurch, Rānui provided a home-away-from-home for 474 nights, enabling his family to stay close and connected while he endured his lifesaving treatment.
Josh tells us “It was the most challenging and desperate time of my life, but Rānui and the people there were my lifeline – a beacon of hope during a very dark time. They helped save my life. I’m thriving, my smile has tripled in size…because I should be dead, I should be dead more than once and here I am enjoying life, and now I’ve been given this opportunity to be an ambassador – to advocate and raise funds for Rānui, a place that’s helped me so much on my journey,” says Josh.
Josh is now cancer-free and enjoys life in Greymouth with his wife and 7-month-old daughter and is hugely honoured to be the Bone Marrow Cancer Trusts very first Ambassador.