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  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_002
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily at her best friend Aimee's baby shower (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird feelings, she joined her mum,

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_001
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily at Lisa and Paul's wedding in January 2018 (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird feelings, she joined her

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_008
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily with her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul at their wedding in January 2018 (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_005
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily and Lisa on holiday in Croatia in 2019 (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird feelings, she joined her mum,

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_007
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily in London five weeks before her diagnosis (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird feelings, she joined her m

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_003
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily and Lisa at the botanical gardens in Cambridge (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird feelings, she joined

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_009
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily in London in September 2020 (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird feelings, she joined her mum, brother an

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_006
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily in Dublin in 2019 (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird feelings, she joined her mum, brother and stepdad

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    DUK10142707_004
    SCHICKSALE - Krebstod mit 22 Jahren: Trauernde Mutter will weiterhin Spenden sammeln in Erinnerung an ihre an Krebs verstorbene Tochter Emily Parsons
    Emily and Lisa in Croatia in 2019 (PA Real Life/Collect) *** Grieving mum vows to keep adding to the
    £63k her remarkable daughter helped raise for
    cancer research despite knowing she was dying at
    just 22
    By Susan Clark, PA Real Life
    For video, contact video@pamediagroup.com
    A grieving mum vows to keep fundraising in memory of her remarkable daughter, who
    raised more than £10,000 for research into her condition in just 10 hours which soared
    to £63,000 and has been climbing in the days since her death.
    Talented and beautiful inside and out, university student Emily Parsons, 22, took her last
    breath surrounded by her family on May 6, 2021, at the Arthur Rank Hospice in
    Cambridge.
    It was only months after being told the pins and needles she had mistaken for exam
    stress were caused by an incurable spinal cord tumour called a diffuse midline glioma a
    type of cancer so rare it only affects 100 people a year in the UK.
    Now, as part of Emilys legacy of kindness, her mum Lisa and stepdad Paul, both 54, and
    her younger brother, Ben, 17, have vowed to keep her JustGiving campaign to fund
    research at Addenbrookes Hospital into her type of cancer going until at least the end of
    2021.
    Lisa, of Cottenham, Cambridge, a retired bank worker, said of her daughter, who was in
    her final year at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, studying business psychology
    with a view to becoming a primary school teacher when she fell ill: Emily was kind.
    She always worried about other people, not herself. I was astounded and inspired by her
    strength and her courage.
    She had grace and dignity which shone out of her and not once did she complain or ask,
    Why me? Instead, she was grateful for the care she was given.
    Emilys problems began in April 2020 when she noticed a strange pins -and-needles
    sensation in her hands and feet, which she initially dismissed as being caused by the
    stress of her upcoming exams.
    Ignoring the weird feelings, she joined her mum, brother an

    (c) Dukas