Living with ALS: Shuswap man pursues his bucket list
KAMLOOPS — It’s a terminal disease, and right now there is no cure or effective treatment. ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s Disease, destroys muscles and over time it leads to a loss of mobility, loss of speech, and it eventually stops someone’s ability to breathe. A terminal diagnosis is devastating at any time, but for a Shuswap man and his family, the reality of living a few more years came just four months ago. What was thought to be a pinched nerve in his back turned out to be ALS. The disease progression has been slow, but relentless, taking over one muscle at a time.
There are people who talk about a bucket list ,and those who live it. Alongside his wife Betty, Martin St Amand is living it.
“We sort of got to a point where realizing there’s nothing we can do, so Betty’s philosophy is we make the most of the time we have left, and what comes after comes, it’s out of our control,” says Martin St Amand.


