The day Nalini Cook (now 47) was told by her family doctor that she was 8 months pregnant when she was a virgin still haunts her now. Photo / Michael Cunningham
A young woman misdiagnosed as 8 months pregnant had a 2.5kg cancerous cyst removed from her body. Now, 22 years later, she finds herself preparing her teenage daughters for a possible life without her after being diagnosed with breast cancer. For the first time, Nalini Cook shares her extraordinary story.
Nalini Cook sat restlessly in a small sterile room, holding her stomach tight as she struggled to breathe.
The 20-year-old's parents sat either side of her, concerned for their daughter's wellbeing.
Then the doctor dropped the bombshell. Cook was 8 months pregnant.
Her parents were appalled. Cook pleaded with the doctor to carry out a proper physical examination - and insisted she had never had sex. But her pleas were ignored.
"I was really shocked and my mother was looking and me horrified, and I was thinking I'm too busy wanting to make money to think about having children," Nalini says.
"My parents were doing timelines, thinking I wasn't staying with them when they were at a wedding, and it was like 'wow this is really testing the values of our family'.
"It was a feeling beyond disbelief. I thought I was going to have the next baby Jesus.
"My mum was panicking, thinking she was going to have a grandchild. Of course, it turned out that wasn't the case."
It took a visit to another doctor to reveal the truth: Cook had a cancer so rare only one other person in the world was known to have survived it.
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The day Cook was told a baby was six weeks away still haunts the 42-year-old descendant of Ngāpuhi (Ngāti Kahu ki Whangaroa me Tainui Iwi).
It was a cold, overcast winter day in 1998. The next morning she woke in her Whangārei bedroom, which was filled with crystals, new age books, stacks of CDs and a map of the world.
She stared at the map and began thinking about all the places she wanted to travel to.
She was in shock and preparing for a midwife's appointment to check on the baby's development.
But she was also annoyed at not being believed and so she made an appointment to see a different GP. He felt her rock-hard newly-bulging tummy and couldn't locate a heartbeat. He ran a blood test.
That helped reveal her "pregnancy" was actually a 2.5kg cancerous cyst containing hair, teeth and nails.
She was one of two women in the world known to have survived this particular type of ovarian cancer. The other was in the United States.
"I remember being happy to prove my family doctor wrong - but then getting this sudden daunting realisation of the seriousness of cancer. It was a bittersweet win.
Two years ago, at 40, the deadly disease returned.
"I was out walking the dogs when I felt a lump in my breast, it felt like a golf ball," says Cook.
Her previous cancer experience had prompted her to act quickly, and she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
"The doctors kept saying 'you're so young to have cancer' and I was thinking 'I had ovarian cancer when I was 20, this isn't young'."
Doctors told Cook getting cancer twice before the age of 40 made her one of the unluckiest people in the world. But for Cook, her thoughts were only for her daughters.
She says being diagnosed with cancer when she was younger was "a piece of cake" compared to now. Back then she only had herself to think about.
"It's a fear of leaving this world and knowing you could not have an imprint on your children and you might not be there for them, that's scary."
In between her second cancer diagnosis and having a double mastectomy, she took her daughters on a spiritual hīkoi to help them understand their identity and where they came from.
They visited marae in Cape Rēinga, Rotorua and Taranaki and learned traditional Māori gardening techniques.
Taking courage from her loved ones, Cook wants to share her extraordinary story to help raise awareness about cancer.
She speaks openly to her daughters about it because she wants them to have that awareness of death and be mindful.