Virginia Golfer July / August 2014 | Page 12

Symetra Tour Eagle Classic Soul Survivor by LISA D. MICKEY S A signature moment in a difficult road back from cancer recovery as a child, Kueny won the Symetra Classic last May in Charlotte, N.C. Laura Kueny, a Symetra Tour player who has battled cancer, is no stranger to challenges a fourth-year professional on the LPGA’s Symetra T They have called her “inspiring” our. and sought her out at tournaments. And indeed, when Kueny, 26, was featured in The New York Times last June as a childhood leukemia survivor who had just won her first professional golf tournament, the shy player from Whitehall, Mich., was forced to walk out of her comfort zone to shake a few more hands. But yet another turning point came in Kueny’s life and golf career last December when she moped around the LPGA Final Qualifying T ournament with her swing coach, Patti Butcher, as her caddie. Kueny did not earn LPGA membership for 2014, and it was as if a dark cloud followed her from hole to hole at that Florida event. When it was over, Butcher asked her student a pointed question. “When we got to the parking lot, she said, ‘Do you want to feel like this for the rest of your life?’ ” Kueny remembers. “It was almost a relief to have my coach say something to me. After all I have been through, I knew I had no reason not to be happy.” 10 EARLY OBSTACLES TO OVERCOME That’s because she is a survivor. At age 3 in 1992, Kueny was diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia. To fight the blood and bone marrow cancer, she endured chemotherapy, raging fevers and spinal taps as a 4-year-old. Still lingering in her memory are the treatments that required Kueny to lie on a table in a fetal position while a long needle was inserted into her spinal cord. More times than she cares to remember, nurses held her down while doctors tested her bone marrow. She underwent chemotherapy for two and a half years and endured the physical and emotional effects of that treatment. She also lost her hair and became bloated from the drug, prednisone, which sometimes made her the butt of children’s teasing. Worst of all, Kueny recalls a bronchial inhalation procedure as part of her leukemia treatment. The child was placed alone in a tiny, airtight chamber, into which antibiotics were sprayed while Kueny inhaled the vapors. “I remember crying and banging on the door and screaming for my parents to let me out,” recalls Kueny, who learned to take pills to avoid having to return to the enclosed chamber for treatments. While her mother, Karen, a registered nurse, understood the medical aspects of her daughter’s illness, Kueny was too young V I R G I N I A G O L F E R | J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 4 to grasp the severity of the disease. All she knew was hospital visits were mostly painful and scary. “I knew there was something different about me, but I had no idea what was going on,” Kueny says. LIFE-ALTERING CONNECTIONS Ironically, it was during a charity golf outing to raise money for Kueny’s medical expenses where she first picked up a cut-down golf club and gave a ball a whack. She was 4, and the event was held at Lincoln Golf Club in Muskegon, Mich., where her father was the club’s pro for 30 years. “She was really sick and very weak, but she’s obviously a fighter,” says her father, Jim Kueny. By age 6, Kueny’s symptoms had stabilized and she was active in sports. She played soccer, Little League Baseball and was hitting golf balls with her father. By age 10, she was competing in junior golf tournaments. Kueny’s activity level remained high as she returned for regular checkups with her doctors. At age 18, she was finally issued a clean bill of health. She also had earned a scholarship to play college golf at Michigan State University. Kueny went on to win three college tournaments and was a three-time all-Big Ten Conference selection, as well as the Big Ten’s 2010 Women’s Golfer of the Year. w w w. v s g a . o r g SCOTT A. MILLER She’s not a household name in golf, but people across the nation have reached out to Laura Kueny,