Mon, Jun 6, 2016 at 05:00 AM
Gladys Holley has two black belts but she faced the fight of her life in knocking out a wound that would not heal.
“I was a fighter,” she says. “I could take pain. I’ve had a broken foot, hand, fingers and ribs. But this is the worst pain I’ve ever been though in my life.”
Her painful
journey began in late 2014 when she found a knot under her arm that turned out
to be cancer in her lymph nodes. Before long, she had 29 lymph nodes removed, a
double mastectomy and nearly 30 radiation treatments.
In January a spot came up on her chest that turned out to be a staph infection requiring another surgery, which was done in Cullman, same as all her previous surgeries.
For
help in healing, Holley turned to the Marshall Wound Healing Center, which
required her to wear a wound vac for weeks. A wound vac applies negative pressure (a vacuum) at the wound site
through a dressing, which helps draw the
edges of the wound together
and remove infectious materials.
“Mother, at one point, was in so much pain she was not
sleeping and her personality changed,” says Holley’s daughter, Marlene Treece,
a nurse at the Veterans Clinic in Guntersville. “It was unbearable to be around
her. She was just in misery.”
When the wound vac was removed to allow the skin to heal on its own, it was determined that a skin graft was necessary. Having skin taken from her leg and applied to her chest left her with two wounds to heal. Holley once again had to use a wound vac to encourage tissue growth at her wound site.
She also began a course of hyperbaric oxygen therapy at the Marshall Wound Healing Center to promote healing. The staff there came to know Holley very well when she came for her daily treatments.
They realized Holley
is a fighter in more ways than one.
“She always had a smile on her face,”
says Sarah Smith, director of the Wound Healing Center. “She brightened our
day.”
Belinda Howard, a certified
registered hyperbaric nurse at the Wound Center, says Holley had a remarkable
sense of humor. She even named her wound vac and said she looked forward to
divorcing him.
“She always said, ‘Today is better
than yesterday. I’m getting better,’” Howard recalls.
Holley,
63, who lives in Arab, believes her history of fighting has helped her survive
the painful battle that is almost won. It also has strengthened her faith.
“A lot of
people couldn’t have gone through what I went through,” she says. “It was God.
If it hadn’t been for God, I wouldn’t have made it.”
Growing up
poor, Holley recalls being picked on and called a ‘hillbilly’, which she says
created the tough fighter she became.
“I just
got mad at the world,” she recalls. “You had to be tough or die when I was
coming up.”
So she
quit school and went to work in a poultry plant. When she saw a newspaper ad
for karate lessons she knew that’s what she wanted – to learn how to fight
back.
“I
thought, ‘I’m going to get into that and nobody’s going to pick on me
anymore.’”
Holley
excelled at karate, soon earned a black belt and started teaching. Ironically
she taught in the same school gym where she had been bullied. She eventually
taught lessons at the Arab Rec Center. She studied Tang Soo Do, a Korean
martial art, and earned a black belt in that too.
“I tested with a broken foot,” she laughs.
The highlight of her fighting life was when she went to the Battle of
Atlanta where she met martial artists turned screen stars Chuck Norris and Bill
‘Superfoot’ Wallace, who worked out with Holley.
“That was the greatest thing in the world that ever
happened to me,” she says.
Holley won three championships before giving up karate after her husband
died nine years ago.
“I just lost interest in everything,” she remembers.
She still works out in the hallway of her small apartment in Arab. Her
kicks are impressive and her arm strikes and punches are fast.
Holley is
grateful to the staff at the Wound Center, which she still visits weekly, for
diligently working to help her heal. She also appreciates her daughter for
changing the dressing on her wound every other day.
“I don’t
know what I’d do without her,” she says. “And I’m thankful for my sweet nurses
and good doctors.”
Treece
says she is thankful that her mother’s suffering is almost over. She still
tires easily and can’t do her own grocery shopping or attend church but she’s
improving all the time. Treece calls her mother every day and does all she can
for her.
“She’s getting there,” she says of Holley. “She’s on the mend. I love that little woman.”
For more information on the Wound Healing Center, click here.