Phil Daoust 

Me and my tumour: A lie of the mind – in pictures

Moving, graphic, darkly funny, Samantha Kittle's blog is the story, not of an illness, but of a woman who refuses to be defined by one
  
  


Me and my brain tumour: Samantha in hospital
­On 4 July 2010, as Samantha Kittle made her way to a show in Chicago, her face began to twitch. Next thing she knew, she was in intensive care, recovering from a series of seizures. Scans showed a mass in her brain’s right frontal lobe. As the 26-year-old prepared to go under the knife, she started the blog A Lie of the Mind. ­Here we see Kittle after the 4 July seizures, when she jokes, doctors ruled out “fierce patriotism” as a cause. Photograph: Samantha Kittle
Me and my brain tumour: Samantha post surgery
Samantha, after the removal of a tumour “the size of a small lemon”. Photograph: Samantha Kittle
Me and my brain tumour: Samantha at home
Plagued by forgetfulness that makes her constantly leave taps running, Samantha's home is covered in Post-It notes until she muses: “It’s all getting a bit Memento”. Photograph: Samantha Kittle
Me and my brain tumour: Samantha buries flowers
Samantha amuses herself by ­burying wellwishers’ flowers. Photograph: Samantha Kittle
Me and my brain tumour: Samantha crosses the road
Samantha ­celebrates her new freedom to cross the road without help. Photograph: Samantha Kittle
Me and my brain tumour: Samantha and her cat
Samantha experiments with a novel way of concealing her impressive scars. Photograph: Samantha Kittle
Me and my brain tumour: Samantha cries
“The bathroom: a great place to cry” – Samantha learns that her tumour cells include some ­“aggressive bad guys” and she must go through chemotherapy. Photograph: Samantha Kittle
Me and my brain tumour: Samantha dresses up
“What do you do when you’re face to face with a brain ­tumour?” Samantha ponders. “Put on your wackiest sunglasses and hats!! And say, ‘Fuck you!’” Photograph: Samantha Kittle
Me and my brain tumour: Samantha at the oncology centre
“You look like a bad-ass bitch,” one specialist tells Samantha when she visits his oncology centre. Her reply? “Sir, you are correct.” Photograph: Samantha Kittle
 

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