 |
|
A young Tom Reed |
The
great outdoors southeast of Tacoma left an early and permanent stamp on Tom
Reed. One of twelve children, he grew up and lived most of his life in
Puyallup, Washington. The son of a career
insulator, Tom knew that he wanted to follow in the footsteps of his dad.
When he graduated from Puyallup High School in 1968, his father encouraged him to get on the
apprenticeship waiting list for Local 7. That summer he worked as an
insulator’s assistant, and his career seemed laid out.
The
War Years and Fists of Iron
By the
fall of 1968, however, our nation’s involvement in Vietnam had become full
blown war. With thousands of young Americans answering their country’s call
to serve, Tom took the initiative and enlisted in the U.S. Coast Guard. The
hazardous nature of working four years on the open seas as a boatswain’s
mate on the cutters Taney and Sweetbriar was almost as hazardous as Tom’s
land duty: he became a boxer, and by the end of his service had been crowned
the East Coast Light Heavyweight Boxing Champion. Never bothered by his lack
of formal training or technique, Tom battered his opponents down onto the
mat with sledgehammer punches born of grit, determination, and an iron
constitution.
Honorably discharged from the coast guard, Tom returned to Washington in the
fall of 1972. Within months his name came up on the waiting list and he was
accepted into the apprenticeship program of Asbestos Workers Local 7.
Following in his Father’s Footsteps
 |
|
East Coast Light Heavyweight Boxing Champion |
The same
grit and determination that had carried him through countless slugfests in
the ring found Tom hard at work in the Pacific Northwest, installing
asbestos insulation on mechanical systems at refineries, paper mills,
chemical companies, breweries, and Boeing facilities in northern and central
Washington. The work was hard and the hours long, but Tom loved it. There is
a particular satisfaction that children feel when they follow in the trade
of a parent, and no one was prouder than Tom to work side by side with
father on many jobs. As the only one of his father’s 12 children to work as
a union insulator, Tom’s pride was even more acute.
In
1999, after spending ten years as apprenticeship coordinator for the union,
Tom worked as labor superintendent for various companies through 2005. Then
in 2006 he decided to return to the tools--an extraordinary opportunity had
arisen: his son Joshua had followed in Tom’s footsteps and was now a
journeyman insulator. The chance to work side by side with Josh, the third
generation of insulators in the Reed family, was too much for the proud
father to pass up. Just as his father had taken pride working with Tom
decades before, Tom knew that working alongside his son would be the perfect
way to finish out his career. Tom’s father Karl had worked as an insulator
until he was 71 years old. Tom foresaw many good years alongside with his
son.
Home
on the Land
Early in
his career Tom had saved his money and purchased an eighteen-acre tract of
land in Graham,
Washington. The mature trees, three beautiful ponds, and the rural unspoiled
surroundings made this the perfect place for Tom and his wife Lorraine to
marry, and in subsequent years this was their corner of the world, where he
and his wife could really feel like they had “gotten away from it all.” In
July 2000 Tom’s daughter Icel followed the family “tradition,” and she got
married amidst the idyllic natural setting.
 |
|
Tom
aboard his Lyland tractor, once owned by his father |
Tom and
Lorraine lived on the property for several years in modest circumstances,
and then one day Tom enlisted the help of his nephew to build a dream home
overlooking the pond. After Icel’s wedding, the praise and compliments on
the beautiful ceremony poured in. Tom and Lorraine sat down, looked at the
numbers, and put together a business plan that would let them rent the
property for weddings and receptions.
Just as
he had taken a straight ahead, two-fisted approach to boxing and to his
career as an insulator, Tom took on the work of developing his property with
the same earnestness and commitment. Seated atop his trusty tractor, this
gentle husband, father, and now grandfather worked hard to groom and develop
his and Lorraine’s “little piece of paradise.”
Nothing
made the work more satisfying than having the grandchildren come visit.
Fishing in the pond, taking tractor rides around the property, or just
spending quiet time on the porch with his children gave Tom a happiness and
sense of peace that he could scarcely believe was his. Working alongside his
son, spending time with his grandchildren, and working at the property had
made his life complete.
Shattered Dreams
Tom and
Lorraine’s idyllic life took a body blow in July 2006 when Tom was diagnosed
with malignant pleural mesothelioma. This aggressive asbestos cancer had
attacked the linings of his lungs and threatened everything that Tom and
Lorraine had worked so hard and so carefully to build.
 |
|
Tom and a few of his
grandchildren |
To make
matters worse, their local doctor did not give them hope. His advice was
simply to “take a long cruise to Tahiti.”
Stunned,
Tom couldn’t believe that the sum total of his treatment options was to give
up all hope and resign to doomsday. Tom Reed decided to do what he had done
his entire life when faced with hard work or adversity: he pulled on the
gloves. This was going to be the battle of his life, and Tom didn’t intend
to be sitting ringside. He intended to swing a leg over the ropes and climb
in.
As union
men often do, when word got out about Tom’s illness, his union brothers lent
a hand. The asbestos workers had recently attended a union meeting where Dr.
Robert Cameron, scientific advisor to
The Pacific Heart, Lung and Blood
Institute and chief of thoracic surgery at UCLA
Medical
Center had given a presentation concerning recent developments in the
treatment of mesothelioma. This key information allowed Tom to get a
life-saving referral to Dr. Cameron.
After
arranging an expedited office visit, Dr. Cameron was able to deliver
something Tom and Lorraine had been praying for: good news. Tom was eligible
for an innovative surgical procedure developed by Dr. Cameron known as a
pleurectomy with decortication. Rather than removing the affected lung, Dr.
Cameron would go into Tom’s chest, strip out as much of the cancer as
possible, and leave Tom with two functioning lungs to continue the battle.
Coming out Swinging
 |
|
Tom recovering at the UCLA
Medical
Center September 2006 |
Round
One commenced on September 7, 2006, and this time it wasn’t just Tom who had
donned the gloves. Dr. Cameron had, too. The pleurectomy with decortication
procedure involved meticulous removal of the tumor while leaving the lung
lobe intact. Within days Tom was walking the halls of UCLA Medical
Center. Not content to let the cancer get off with a pounding,
Tom and Dr. Cameron delivered Round Two: a second series of vicious blows to
the tumor via six weeks of radiation therapy.
It was
at this juncture that Dr. Cameron’s innovative procedure made the difference
between life and death. During the radiation therapy, Tom developed multiple
blood clots in his healthy lung, and pneumonia in his left lung. Tom was
kept alive by the lung which, less than two months before, had been
surrounded by the mesothelioma tumor. The physicians who treated Tom
candidly told him that had he opted for the procedure of simply amputating
the cancer-surrounded lung, he would never have survived the pneumonia.
|
 |
|
Tom Reed, January 2007 |
Hoping for the Knockout Blow
Tom and Lorraine know that the fight hasn’t
ended. Mesothelioma is a tough and battle-scarred opponent who rarely gives
up even in the face of a full-scale barrage. But Tom’s gloves aren’t about
to come off. Tom says this: “Dr. Cameron and his staff have been exceptional
and compassionate to me and my family.” Working with Dr. Cameron has
instilled in Tom the knowledge that mesothelioma can be treated, that his
treatment plan will continue to yield additional days, additional weeks,
additional months, and additional time to spend with his family and enjoy
his life.
“I wouldn’t even know about Dr. Cameron if my
lawyer, Roger Worthington, hadn’t educated me. It’s made all the difference
in the world,” Tom says. Dr. Cameron manages the
Punch Worthington Research
(PWR) Lab, a non-profit medical foundation dedicated to the memory of
Punch Worthington, Ph.D., of Salem, Oregon, who recently passed away from
asbestos lung cancer. The PWR lab is researching novel mechanisms for the
early detection and treatment of asbestos cancer, as well as ways to reduce
the risk of cancer among exposed workers.
|
 |
|
Tom's tumor removed in
September, 2006 |
** POSTED
JANUARY 22, 2007
**
Mr. Reed
passed away on September 8, 2007
|