What started as a mild stomach upset during the holiday season quickly spiraled into something far worse for Georgia-Leigh Gardiner. At first, she assumed it was stress or a simple stomach bug, but as the pain persisted and worsened, her repeated pleas for help were brushed aside by doctors. Looking back, she believes those months of disregard robbed her of a crucial window for early treatment.
For nearly an entire year, Georgia-Leigh sought medical help for the severe pain and nausea that took over her life. Each time, her worries were labeled as minor or non-urgent. By the time someone finally took her seriously, the damage was already irreversible. At just 28 years old, and with a toddler son at home, she was given a heartbreaking diagnosis: a terminal illness that would likely take her life within a year.
Today, Georgia-Leigh is forced to live in the shadow of medical neglect. Her story is a painful reminder of how dangerous it can be when patients aren’t heard, and how fragile the time we assume we have really is.
The Early Red Flags
In late 2024, Georgia-Leigh began to feel intense, continuous pain in her upper abdomen. Eating became almost impossible. Even water triggered vomiting, and her body rapidly shed weight — she lost about 40 pounds in less than a year. Desperate, she saw her family doctor.
The initial diagnosis? Acid reflux. She was given a common indigestion medication and sent on her way. But her pain kept intensifying. Over the following months, she went back repeatedly — sometimes to her GP, other times to Leeds General Infirmary — yet each time, she left without real answers.
“I kept losing weight, I couldn’t eat, I was constantly exhausted, and nobody seemed to take it seriously,” she said.
By early 2025, her life had become an exhausting battle. Blood tests hinted at irregularities, but no decisive steps were taken. Meanwhile, Georgia-Leigh struggled to care for her two-year-old son, Arlo, through the haze of pain and fatigue.
“Each time I went in, they sent me home again,” she said. “I sometimes wondered if my age played a role — if an older patient would have been taken more seriously from the start.”
Finally, nearly a year after her first symptoms, she met a new GP who listened carefully. During an exam, this doctor found a lump in her breast. Although it turned out unrelated, the discovery finally opened a door: she was referred for further investigation through the NHS’s non-specific symptoms pathway.
Tests at the breast clinic were clear, but a follow-up endoscopy revealed alarming issues. A CT scan quickly followed. Then came the devastating news.
The Diagnosis That Changed Everything
On June 13, 2025, Georgia-Leigh and her fiancé, Callum, walked into St James’ University Hospital thinking they would discuss possible treatments. Instead, they were told she had a rare and aggressive form of stomach cancer called linitis plastica — a type that thickens the stomach wall and is notoriously difficult to detect early.
The cancer had already spread to her peritoneum, nearby lymph nodes, and possibly her lungs. It was classified as stage 4 and deemed incurable. Her doctors estimated she might have around a year left, depending on how she responded to treatment.
“I laughed at first,” she recalled. “Then I asked Callum if it was really happening. I cycled through every emotion in minutes.”
Once home, the shock overtook her completely. She didn’t speak for three days, frozen by the reality of leaving her son behind.
“I kept thinking, ‘I can’t die. I have a two-year-old son,'” she said.
Fighting for Every Moment
Determined not to give up, Georgia-Leigh began exploring every treatment avenue. She is set to begin chemotherapy in mid-July, aiming to slow the cancer’s spread and buy more time. She has also qualified for an NHS clinical trial, which could give her access to advanced therapies.
She’s trying alternative and supportive therapies too — oxygen chamber sessions, a strict alkaline diet, and holistic treatments. She’s even considering treatment at the Hallwang Clinic in Germany, known for experimental cancer care, though the costs are steep and require fundraising.
“I’m young, otherwise healthy, and I’m not ready to give up,” she said. “I’m starting chemo soon, and if the trial results are good, that might buy me more time.”
Her focus is now on creating as many memories as possible with Arlo.
“I want him to always remember me,” she said. “Even if he can’t hold the memories himself, I want there to be pictures and moments he can look back on.”
Money raised through her GoFundMe is helping to fund experiences together — possibly a holiday — and to ease treatment costs.
Before her illness, Georgia-Leigh dreamed of marrying Callum in Italy. Now, they’ve decided to move their wedding up to September 2025 so she can be strong enough to enjoy it. With the help of the Wedding Wishing Well Foundation, she has chosen her dream dress — romantic and ivory, exactly as she had envisioned.
A Community Rallies
Her story has touched thousands. In just weeks, supporters raised over $9,500 to help with treatment and family plans. Strangers described her as “unbelievably brave,” and friends have organized local events in her honor, including a sold-out ladies’ night ballroom event.
Georgia-Leigh now updates supporters regularly, sharing her journey and advocating for other young people to trust their instincts and push for answers.
“If my story helps even one person push for an early diagnosis, then at least some good will come of it,” she said.
She has also agreed to undergo genetic testing to help researchers understand why such a rare and aggressive cancer appeared in someone so young.
The Bigger Picture
Stomach cancer can be sneaky, often showing vague early symptoms mistaken for harmless issues. Unexplained weight loss, nausea, loss of appetite, persistent pain, and vomiting blood can all be warning signs. Georgia-Leigh’s story is a powerful reminder: if symptoms persist, insist on thorough checks.
For Georgia-Leigh, the fight now is not just for herself, but for the moments she can still gift her son — moments filled with love, laughter, and memory-making that will live on long after she’s gone.