By Ramon
Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- It’s a double whammy Jerry Uy-yan (Uyan in the ring)
never encountered or absorbed, be it in or out of the ring, over
the years he fought in the bantamweight class.
Now 49, the pro boxer-turned woodcarver lies
in his bed at the orthopedic ward of the Baguio General Hospital and Medical
Center.
Father to two young girls, he’s slowly trying
to recover from a bad fall last Feb. 27. The accident rendered him paralyzed, a
predicament the fighter inside tells him shouldn’t be permanent.
His younger brother Bert arrived last week
for the watch relieving Jessa, Jerry’s nine-year old daughter. The kid had to
repair back to the house they’re renting at Km. 4, Asin Road Barangay, to rest
and be around for her seriously ill mother.
Both ways, it would be too much to bear for
April, Jerry’s 50-year old wife, to be by his hospital bed these days.
She herself can now hardly stand, her
mobility impaired by breast cancer, and by the irregular series of chemotherapy
treatment sessions she underwent since the diagnosis came two years ago.
To be able to stand and to walk, she props herself up first with a wooden
crutch her brother-in-law recently fashioned out.
She was alone in their rented home, sitting
on a monobloc chair, her arms resting on the dinner table, her head capped by a
knitted bonnet covering the balding effect of chemotherapy.
“Jerra left before dawn,” she said of
her elder daughter. At 11, the kid was trying to be of use this summer
break by helping an aunt peddle carrots and upland vegetables at the
Hilltop Area of the city market.
“She’ll be in the sixth grade this June,
Jessa in grade IV,” April said. “We came from Urdaneta where the kids were
enrolled, as it was where my husband could find wood he needed to make tables and
chairs.”
She remembers that Jerry, an Ifugao wood
artisan, was carving dog figurines when they met for the first
time, in Dinalupihan, Bataan. April, a native of San Gabriel, La Union
was assigned in Bataan from 1995 to 2000, to teach the Bible to children
as a missionary of the Free Believers in Christ Fellowship.
“Before Bataan, I was in Aguinaldo,
Ifugao for two years also sharing the Word of God with children,” she
added. “ I remember even adults came to class, initially to learn how to read so
they would be able to read the Bible.”
Her life-changing illness came in 2011,
“Bimtak (it burst),” she said of the lesion on her right breast that emitted
pus and blood. Since then, she had undergone eight chemotherapy sessions
at irregular intervals, the frequency of which depended on sales of Jerry’s
antique-type chairs and tables.
Jerry had just raised and paid P20,000
for her medicines when he figured in the accident. From Urbaneta, he was rushed
to the Region I Medical Center in Dagupan City. From there, his brother Bert
transferred him to the BGHMC.
“By now, her medicines had run through and
her check-up’s overdue,” Jerry recalled.
His left palm was gripping the overhead hand
assist strap, a sure sign his upper limbs were not affected by the damage on
the lower spinal. “I can’t move my feet but I hope therapy would later work.”
His tailbone (the end segment of the spinal
column) had been shattered by the fall, Bert explained.
With the family’s, and relatives’ finances
drained and with no one else to turn to, Jerry and April consented to have
their predicament narrated through the Baguio media, hoping Samaritans
among news readers and listeners would reach out to the family in crisis.
Often, it takes one to know one. That’s why
Adonis Togana, a public school teacher now also into his fifth year fighting
cancer, took pains to bring the couple’s plight to the attention of the Baguio
media.
“Jerry and April need all the help they can
get, perhaps more than anybody else in our neighborhood,” Togana said.
Although still in the thick of his bout with
the big C, Togana feels luckier than the couple. After he was diagnosed for
skin and tissue cancer in 2008, he took a leave from the Pines City National
High School and started knocking on doors. He keeps a list of people of various
walks who contributed to his continuing therapy.
Togana’s fight is for his 15-year old
son Trojan and 12-year old daughter Jizrelle. He lost his wife and third child
at child birth in 2005.
Unlike him, neither Jerry nor April can walk
to knock on doors. Their daughters Jessa and Jerra are too young to be making
the rounds for Samaritans.
April can be reached through Globe
cellphone number 09176946873 while Jerry can be contacted through Sun
Cell number 09322996865. They can visit Jerry at the ortho department of the
BGHMC. His bed is first on the right row of the male ward which is on the
right wing of the department located on the second floor of the main
building. .
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