In January, Elanor’s leg began to ache.
It was an ache pronounced enough for her to notice, but an ache quiet enough for her to keep moving. It was a dull, consistent ache that, before long, wasn’t so dull anymore.
“In the beginning, [the pain] was enough for me to not want to walk much. I didn’t feel like I could walk as far as usual, and dad and I, especially when we’re on holidays, really like to walk,” the 20-year-old told Mamamia.
Her holiday was in Europe and her father is Labor MP Julian Hill. In the space of two weeks, that dull ache became a cramping, “throbbing”, “shooting” sensation, and that holiday had moved on to Sri Lanka.
She was “cramping for an hour” one night. On another, it took her ten minutes to walk to the shower from her bedroom.
“The only way I can describe it is that I felt funny, really off. I didn’t feel like I could concentrate and I definitely didn’t feel well. I couldn’t put any pressure on it.
“I said to dad, ‘I think I have a blood clot’. I think at that point he thought I was being a little dramatic,” she says.
But as it happens, she wasn’t being dramatic at all, but it would take them a few more hours to know that for sure.
“We went straight to the local hospital which was 20 minutes away. They told me it was a muscle injury from when I fell over – even though I had never fallen over – bandaged it, and said it would be fine. They wouldn’t do an ultrasound for eight hours.”