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Give cancer the finger

North Vancouver man set out on cross-country run back in May as way to raise awareness against prostate cancer
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Dr. Riley Sendt is on the tail-end of his cross-Canada run to raise awareness of the fight against prostate cancer. The North Shore resident is scheduled to be in 91原创 today.

Running across Canada: for many of us, Terry Fox is the first name that comes to mind. Before he died of cancer in 1981, Fox made himself a legend by taking on the challenge of running across country to raise awareness and money for cancer research. He covered 5,373 kilometres in 143 days on the road.

Now meet Dr. Riley Senft, who is in the midst of attempting that same unimaginable feat 鈥 using two legs to conquer Canada and cancer.

鈥淭erry Fox was an incredible person. He essentially said, 鈥榃hat is the hardest thing for me to do? Run? Okay then I鈥檒l run across Canada,鈥欌 Riley said in an email interview.

鈥淭erry had one leg, he had cancer, and he didn鈥檛 have access to the GPS or social media or any of the other technology that has evolved since he ran that I have access to and yet he managed to capture the heart of our nation and leave an incredible legacy. I don鈥檛 have cancer, I have two legs, I have a bigger support vehicle, and I still find this a huge challenge.鈥

People run marathons all the time. And the 42.195 kilometres to cross the finish line is viewed as a huge test to how far the body and mind can be pushed.

Riley is back in B.C. and scheduled to run through 91原创 this afternoon (Oct. 4).

He has clocked roughly 60 kilometres a day, well over one marathon every 24 hours.

His body is being beaten and the pavement gives no mercy.

鈥淚 still have blisters all over my feet and I have given up on the idea that I鈥檒l ever be blister-free during this run. I鈥檝e learned how to minimize them as much as possible but in the beginning I found myself in hospital in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, because of infected blisters that had me off my feet for two days. My legs have gotten used to the mileage but I had hamstring and calf issues in the beginning that I had to see physiologists for along the way. The recent heat wave was brutal and I was drinking over 10 litres of fluid a day.鈥

But despite the grind, Riley says it鈥檚 all worth it to raise money and awareness for prostate cancer. His charity is called Step into Action and his goal is to raise $1 million during his run.

鈥淚鈥檓 doing this because I鈥檓 tired of prostate cancer having such a large impact in my life and I want to raise prostate cancer awareness so that men know when they should be getting checked and so that they don鈥檛 fear the digital rectal exam because it鈥檚 not a big deal at all.

鈥淢y grandfather died of prostate cancer, my father currently has prostate cancer, a number of close family friends have prostate cancer, and odds are either myself or my brother will get prostate cancer. I hate prostate cancer and this is my way of going to war against it.鈥

His heart was and is in the right place, but when Riley鈥檚 father Rod first heard of what his son wanted to do, it was a shock.

鈥淚t was the sheer enormity of it,鈥 Rod told Black Press. 鈥淗e was in the worst shape of his life. He was three and a half years into his medical residency living in Winnipeg. In winter you don鈥檛 get the chance to go out and train.鈥

Riley may have been out of shape when he started his run this past May, but his family knew that no matter what the circumstances were, if Riley said he was going to run across the country, that was exactly what he was going to do.

鈥淲hen he sets his mind to a goal, I鈥檓 confident he will achieve it,鈥 says his proud father, who raised his family on the North Shore, a place he still calls home.

鈥淲hen I first heard about it, I thought he was nuts. It鈥檚 an ambitious thing to do. Of course you worry,鈥 sister Lauren chimes in.

Riley and his brother Derek are no strangers to tackling Canada from east to west. Nearly 10 years ago, separately, they both rode their bikes across the country for Habitat for Humanity.

鈥淩unning has always been Riley鈥檚 passion and running across Canada was something floating around, he would always consider it,鈥 says Derek.

In order to stay sane, Riley listens to audio books and plays mind games to trick his head into thinking there is less mileage than there really is. He鈥檚 also got a crew including friend Michael Downie and David Bell to help him keep in touch with others, spread the word on prostate cancer and make sure he can achieve what he has set out to do.

鈥淩aising awareness is just as important because if you can detect prostate cancer early in stage one, there is over a 90-per-cent cure rate,鈥 Riley says.

Vancouver Prostate Centre鈥檚 clinician-scientist and urologic surgeon Dr. Martin Gleave applauds Riley鈥檚 quest.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a great illustration of the length of which people will go to get a message out to raise awareness. I think that in general the awareness of cancers, particularly in prostate, has increased.鈥

Gleave and Riley both agree that advocates of breast cancer awareness have done a 91原创enal job in delivering early detection and prevention messages to the public. And it鈥檚 Riley鈥檚 mission to make prostate cancer an issue on the forefront of men鈥檚 minds.

鈥淚f I could get prostate cancer the same sort of recognition that breast cancer has among females then maybe I could feel like I鈥檝e done enough to raise awareness but we are a long way away from that point,鈥 Riley says.

After the run, Riley intends to head back to Winnipeg to finish his residency. He plans to return to the North Shore to practice.

Follow Riley鈥檚 journey by visiting www.stepintoaction.ca.



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