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Calgary firefighter survives cancer to complete fitness challenge in honour of little boy

WATCH ABOVE: After surviving cancer, a Calgary firefighter set out on a mission to do something with his second chance. Lorne Miller embarked on a fundraising run for a 3-year-old boy diagnosed with a similar type of sarcoma. After 48 hours, he crossed the finish line and little Sawyer and his family were there, cheering him on. Jill Croteau reports. – Mar 18, 2022

A Calgary firefighter took on a gruelling challenge a year after being diagnosed with cancer.

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Lorne Miller and friends crossing ‘red carpet’ finish line. Jill Croteau/Global Calgary

Lorne Miller ran the Goggins Challenge. Along with some friends, he rotated running four miles every 4 hours for 48 hours.

Calgary firefighter Lorne Miller. Jill Croteau, Global News

Friday at noon he ended that journey at the Auburn Bay Community Centre. He endured the tough beating on his body, because he was inspired by three-year-old Sawyer Velting. He started the fundraiser to help his family.

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Three-year-old Sawyer Velting was diagnosed with cancer for a second time. Courtesy: Ashley Velting

Velting is navigating a type of sarcoma similar to the one that Miller beat. He survived cancer after a volleyball-sized tumour was removed from his abdomen in 2021.

READ MORE: 12-year-old Calgary boy battling leukemia raises $4K for Make-A-Wish Foundation

Sawyer got him through the hard parts of his run.

“I thought of Sawyer the whole time. When I was having a tough night, I was imagining what Sawyer must be going through,” Miller said.

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Sawyer’s younger brother Bennett and his mom and dad — Ashley and Kaylen — surprised Miller on one of his final legs of the run.

Miller and the Velting family. Courtesy: Lorne Miller

“You just feel it in your heart. We had a beautiful hug and it was amazing, it was powerful,” Miller said. “I am so grateful they joined us and so grateful to be in a position to help them as others helped us.”

The Veltings wanted to run a part of the challenge alongside him.

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“It is hope. He’s been through this, so it’s great seeing people on the other side of treatment. It’s refreshing for us to see,” Kaylen Velting said.

Miller’s wife, Lindsay, said her husband is a champ.

“It’s the journey we were given so we were going to walk it together,” Lindsay said. “When he was first diagnosed, he thought he would never run or never be able to go back on the fire truck, so this is proving to him and the rest of the community he can do absolutely anything.

“He’s amazing.”

Heather Roy wanted to be at the finish line also. Her family met Sawyer when her 11-year-old daughter Evelyn was going through pediatric cancer treatment. Evelyn lost her life in February 2020.

Evelyn Roy. Courtesy: Heather Roy

“We love Sawyer, that’s the heart of it,” Roy said. “Sawyer is one of my favourite little humans. We are here as emotional support. We know what it’s like to be in the space they are in.”

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The Velting family is so appreciative of what Miller has done. They too have plans to help others, thanks to the firefighter who became their hero.

“We are proud of him,” Velting said. “We hope to do something when we’re through this, so we will pay it forward.

“It’s very special for sure. I don’t even know a lot of these people and it’s crazy the community support.”

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