• About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
The Tawny Frogmouth
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
The Tawny Frogmouth
Home » Online Articles » You’re never too young to have bowel cancer 
Health

You’re never too young to have bowel cancer 

Chris Clarke is ready for the battle of a lifetime, as are more young Australians than ever before
Liam CarrollBy Liam CarrollFebruary 24, 20263 Mins Read
Chris undergoing Chemotherapy for bowel cancer
Chris undergoing Chemotherapy

In late October, Fairlight’s Chris Clarke was up in Byron for a holiday. The 36 year old father of three splashing about in the pool, hanging with the family, enjoying a break from his landscaping business, living the dream. 

“Part way through the trip, my wife Jade and I both got a gastro bug,” says Chris. “She came good by late arvo, but I just couldn’t stop spewing and the pain in my stomach, it was like nothing I’d ever felt in my life.” Being a proud Aussie bloke, Clarkey battled through the night. “6am the next day, I just had nothing left. I said Jade, you have to take me to hospital.”

At Byron Central Hospital, despite being a relatively young man, the team ordered a stomach scan for Chris, “Let’s just be sure to eliminate everything…” Next thing he was transported straight to Tweed Heads. “At midnight, the Tweed Valley Hospital’s Bowel Colorectal surgery team told me it was a tumour, that I had stage 4 bowel cancer, and they wanted to operate in the morning.”

Blink, your life can change in a heartbeat. “Jade and I decided our best bet was to not proceed with surgery so far from home. At 1am we packed the car and drove straight back to Sydney, direct to North Shore Private. I had surgery the next day.”

Monday 3 November, surgeons removed Chris’ tumour, as well as all the affected lymph cells, a big window of his stomach lining and section of his bowel. In hospital for ten days, Chris came out 20 kilograms lighter. 

Before this drastic turn of events, Chris had no symptoms or any idea he was in trouble. “I asked the surgeon; how long do you think this tumour’s been active?” Based on his experience, he assumed it had likely been only months, not years. “Considering this is Stage 4 cancer, if we hadn’t found this in late October, if I’d never caught that stomach bug and just carried on as normal for a few more months, who knows?”

Chris’ story is sadly not a one off. Over 1,800 people under the age of 50 are diagnosed with bowel cancer each year (11.7% of all bowel cancer cases), with Australia seeing a 65% increase in early-onset cases since 2005. It is now a leading cause of cancer death for younger men, often diagnosed at advanced stages due to overlooked symptoms.

Chris’ mission now is twofold: Beat the cancer! He’s currently two months into six months of chemotherapy; And raise the awareness, especially for younger people.

“Something’s changed. Younger people need to get on top of this. Bowel cancer rates are 2 to 3 times higher among Australians born in the 1990s than those born in the 1950s. And over the past three decades there has been a 266% increase in bowel cancer incidence rates in 25-44 year olds.”

How exactly to raise awareness and funds for charity? Well, undergoing chemotherapy hasn’t numbed Chris’ get up and go approach. “15 March, I’m running the Orange marathon! I’ve run it before, it’s flat, I’ll be fine. Plus, my intensive care paramedic mate has promised to come with me and make sure I don’t die.” Talk about bowel movement. 

Head here to support Clarkey’s Orange marathon run for bowel cancer.

Visit bowelcanceraustralia.org for all important information about this escalating health issue for younger Australians.

Cancer awareness Issue 57
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Related Posts

Get to know Dr Mindy Da of South Steyne Medical

Get to know Dr. Richard Curran of South Steyne Medical

Dr Mindy Da: Supporting women, families and young people

Comments are closed.

Stories from Past Tawnies

The Lifeline “Spring Clean” 

August 28, 2024

Out with the Aldi, in with the Barrel Room

January 4, 2026

Film review: Marcel the Shell with Shoes On

April 30, 2023

And just like that, osteogenesis happens!

April 27, 2022

Old school Freshwater banking never goes out of style

November 1, 2023

Protecting Australia’s Macropod Treasure

August 20, 2021

Cover Artist… Emily Foresto

July 31, 2024

The Northern Beaches Hapkidoist Investor  

May 25, 2024

The Booker luck of the Irish, storytelling genius 

February 27, 2024

Your Brain: The Karate Kid

October 30, 2024

Shark Bunker

September 26, 2025

Any interest in making an easy $100,000? 

October 2, 2022

Minimise your bad debts

February 25, 2022

Governor Philip Lookout: A micro adventure for a sky high view

June 26, 2023

Taking Care of Our Medics With Hospitality

February 25, 2022
Our Mag

Online Articles

Back Issues

Media

Advertising

Advertising

Media Kit

Say Hi!

Contact Us

Support Us

Tip Jar

Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 The Tawny Frogmouth

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.