Max Taylor - United Unscripted.

UTD Unscripted: It's time to give something back

Tuesday 24 December 2019 12:25

It is massive for people with cancer to just have hope.

When you’re in football, you’re chasing your next contract and your head is just filled with football. You want to do this and that, and it is all just a bubble.

I’ve been walking through the child oncological unit at The Christie and I was just thinking to myself: Why should they have to go through that?

Seeing it makes me want to give something back, maybe using the platform I have to do that. I have to because, if it wasn’t for people doing that in the past, I don’t know where I would have been without the funding for research and everything that goes into the treatment.

I think sometimes there isn’t a light you can see at the end of the tunnel, especially mid-treatment. There is probably one good day every fortnight. And that’s it. You do feel that low at times and, even after treatment, when you’re still not back to normal, people don’t realise just how low you feel.

You feel like there is no progress but, now I’m out the other end, I can think back and appreciate there was progress and each day was closer. It’s hard at the time to think that, though. You just feel you’re bang in the middle of it and the end is all so far away.
Max Taylor says

"There is probably one good day every fortnight. And that’s it. "

The change in seasons, with winter approaching, took me back to the same stage I was at last year. So, I went into The Christie and called Steve Harcourt who works for the Teenage Cancer Trust and just wanted to see if there was anything I can do. I asked if there were any young lads who are in the ward and he let me know about a boy who was down from Scotland, who loves football.

He is having treatment on a brain tumour and is down from Scotland for 39 nights, leading up to Christmas, and he has a family with him.

Coming all the way down here at any time of the year for this is horrible, but especially with Christmas coming. The fact was I could maybe make his day – just a little. Jesse signed a shirt for me and he was absolutely buzzing when I gave it to him. It brought me happiness just to see him smiling a little bit through the treatment because I remember how bad it was.

It was a case of thinking how he’s thinking. Just the fact you can come in and, whether it’s taking his mind off it or changing his perspective, it doesn’t really matter. The time you spend with him has completely changed how he was feeling and I spoke to the guys afterwards and they said he hadn’t smiled like that in the two weeks since coming in.

For me to hear that, I would do that every day.

Honestly, if anyone needs uplifting, if there’s anything I can do then I’m happy to help. I’d like to come in and just have a chat.

I didn’t know anything about The Christie beforehand. It’s only when you know someone close to you is being treated there and you visit it. I admit I didn’t even know where it was until I went in for treatment.

But they were unbelievable. I remember the first time I went in and the doctor was really serious because they have to tell you everything that could happen. It was a case of just… Oh my God… but you have your oncology nurse with you and she would calm you down and talk you through everything.

The set-up there was unbelievable.

When you’re having the treatment, you can’t go into rooms with more than six people. Not that you’re in the mood to go out or anything. But the doctor at United was amazing the whole time and he would often come over for a talk.

No injury even compares to it because then you know you can come back from it and work on things every day. When I was going through the treatment, I didn’t know what was helping me and there was no way of seeing if it was actually helping at the time.

When you’re injured, you’re having surgery and different treatment which can make you feel better but you just don’t know that is the case at all when you’re recovering from cancer.

It was just completely new to me. Obviously, Joe Thompson, who overcame cancer twice during his playing career, helped me in terms of giving a helping hand from his similar experiences but it was just something so new. It just gets to the point where it’s almost… wait a minute now, I’ve just got to go and fight it.

Max Taylor says

"Even the days when you’re feeling alright – maybe the one day all week – you’d turn and look in the mirror and it’s like, no I still have cancer."

You don’t have any hair. You don’t feel right.

Even the days when you’re feeling alright – maybe the one day all week – you’d turn and look in the mirror and it’s like, no, I still have cancer.

As a footballer, you’re used to having your appearance and building up to be in the best shape for the weekend. When you have it all taken away from you, it means it is really tough to look at yourself.

Football is my life so, if I wouldn’t have been able to play football again, I don’t know what I would have done.

Thankfully, I made it back and I remember the first day walking back into the training ground. I just wanted to say ‘hello’ to everyone really and I saw Kieran and Michael in the canteen, they’d been texting me throughout and I’d been given them updates.

The coaching staff invited me out onto the grass to watch the first team train and that is where I first met Ole and had a chat with him. I think Ole knew I was at the stage where I just wanted a bit of normality. I could not have asked for any more from the club. They did everything that I needed them to do and more.

When I was feeling low, I could speak to anyone here – whether it was the cleaners, kitchen staff, kit men. They all knew what was going on and wanted to know if I was well and feeling better.

Taylor: I won't let cancer define me

 Article

Max Taylor discusses his remarkable story with former United youngster Joe Thompson in an MUTV interview.

Some of the lads I’d been with since I was 14, like Angel, Jimmy, Dylan and Dion, they knew me well enough to just talk about normal things too. They were having a laugh with me, when I came back, and when I did the first proper 50-50 tackle, they were not holding back.

It was definitely exactly what I wanted. I didn’t want people holding back anymore and you need the sessions to be a bit feisty. Obviously, you don’t want to have any injuries but it’s better to be 100 per cent and play it as much like a game as possible.

I knew I was back.

When I reflect, I think it helped being in a footballing environment because you know if there is a space of weakness and you want to be working on it.

Before my diagnosis, when I felt that dragging, and a bit of pain, there was clearly something not right there. There are some things that you cannot help in your life.

Anybody feeling something similar should get it checked. I mean, it is not always going to be cancer. That is the worst thing possible. But I don’t think anyone should be scared to get it checked.

It is a massive thing. If people can hear whatever I have got to say and even just have a problem looked at, it may be helping in some way.

I just want to give back anything that I can.

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