TRAIL

Meet my brain tumour

For 47-year-old Anton Böhmer, the difference between surviving and thriving is luck, mindset... and trails.

No, it’s not in a little bottle. Don’t worry, it’s a common question. We have parted ways. But let’s start at the beginning.

How do you know you have a brain tumour? Well, you don’t. I didn’t. At the time I was fit and healthy. In the month prior to the beginning I ran two half-marathons. I had no headaches, no dizziness, or a Hollywood-style trickle of blood from my nose. All seemed fine; no warning signs.

I can remember leaving work after a family therapy session, taking the off-ramp onto the N1 and driving into the dark of a May evening. I played my usual switching-off-after-a-day’s-work music and felt good. But I

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from TRAIL

TRAIL2 min readPopular Culture & Media Studies
A Turn In The Trail
You may have been a TRAIL reader or advertiser for a while now. You’ve made this magazine possible for 10 years. It’s been a journey and an adventure that I look back at amazed. Thank you. This a bitter-sweet moment, a turn in the trail. Yes, this is
TRAIL4 min read
Your Photos
It’s sunset at Ngubu huts on day one of the Otter Trail. “September is a beautiful time of year to hike the Otter Trail – the weather is balmy and the whales are on the move. Sitting on the rocks in the bay, watching the sunset as the waves thunder,
TRAIL7 min read
Trail Connection
It’s indisputable that the Otter is special because of the breathtaking beauty and technical aspect of the route. It is also special because of the organising family and the trail runners themselves. For me however, there is more than that. There is

Related Books & Audiobooks