TV presenter Davina McCall first received news of a brain tumour during a routine health check tied to her menopause advocacy work, her world tilted. Though doctors confirmed the tumour was benign, the 57-year-old star spiraled into a deep fear that her time was running out. What followed was both sobering and transformative: she began preparing an end-of-life checklist—an exercise she now describes as the “best gift” she could have given herself and her family.This story is not just about one woman’s health scare. It’s about how facing mortality reshapes priorities, strengthens family bonds, and forces conversations many of us spend a lifetime avoiding.The growth, identified as a colloid cyst, was discovered in November 2024. For months, McCall admits she lived in denial. It wasn’t until her fourth neurosurgeon gave a blunt assessment—warning that if she didn’t act quickly, she could die—that she finally moved toward surgery.“He told me it was a big tumour and that if it grew any more, I’d risk water on the brain,” McCall recalled. “Even flying could have triggered a medical emergency.”That stark warning snapped her out of hesitation. By the time she went into surgery, she had already reorganized her personal life, written letters to her children, and found peace with the possibility of not waking up.The procedure to remove a colloid cyst is no small undertaking. Surgeon Kevin O’Neill, who performed McCall’s operation, described it as “like defusing a bomb.” The team drilled into her skull and used GPS-guided precision to excise the cyst without damaging her memory pathways.The risks were real, if anything went wrong, she could have faced a stroke or permanent short-term memory loss—an outcome that would have ended her television career. Yet the alternative was equally grim. Leaving the cyst untreated meant the risk of sudden death remained.When McCall woke up, she was disoriented, even believing for a time that her late father was still alive. But once her mind cleared, she felt something remarkable: her mental fog had lifted. The “fuzziness” she once attributed to menopause, she now believes, was partly the tumour pressing on her memory.What makes McCall’s story resonate so deeply is not just the surgery, but the way she prepared herself and her family beforehand. She created what she calls her end-of-life checklist, ensuring her children would be supported and that her affairs were in order.“I had to make sure my kids would be okay if I didn’t make it. That’s all I really cared about,” she said. Her daughter Holly eventually reassured her: “You’re not dying.”By confronting her fears head-on, McCall says she gave herself a profound sense of peace. “I could go to sleep on the operating table knowing they’d be okay. It was the best gift, I am not afraid of dying.”What Is Colloid Cysts?Davina’s diagnosis underscores a crucial point about brain tumours: not all are cancerous, but even benign ones can be dangerous.Benign tumours, like colloid cysts, grow slowly and do not spread. Still, their location can cause life-threatening complications if they press against vital structures in the brain.Malignant tumours are cancerous, often fast-growing, and can spread to other organs through the bloodstream or lymphatic system.Pre-cancerous tumours sit in a gray area, not malignant yet but carrying the potential to develop into cancer if untreated.Colloid cysts are rare but potentially fatal. Though benign, they can block cerebrospinal fluid, leading to hydrocephalus (fluid buildup in the brain). According to NHS data, non-cancerous brain tumours are more common in people over 50 and often present with headaches, drowsiness, and vision problems.One of the most striking aspects of McCall’s experience is how it shifted her relationship with mortality. She now hosts Begin Again, a podcast focused on helping people live lives without regret—so that when the time comes, they can face death without fear.“I have lived the life I wanted,” she explained. “I’m not lying there thinking, ‘I wish I’d done that thing, that job, or left that relationship.’ Begin Again is about starting over and living the life you want.”Her words point to something bigger than her diagnosis: how health crises can catalyze clarity. For McCall, the fear of dying was replaced by gratitude for living.Symptoms Davina IgnoredMcCall now admits she overlooked two warning signs: brain fog and memory issues. Initially, she dismissed them as symptoms of menopause. Only later did she realize they were likely caused by the cyst pressing on her short-term memory pathway.This misinterpretation is not uncommon. Brain tumours can mimic other conditions, making early detection difficult. Her story serves as a reminder to take persistent or unusual symptoms seriously, especially as we age.Perhaps the most enduring lesson from McCall’s journey is the value of facing death directly. The very act of writing her checklist—organizing her thoughts, her finances, and her farewells—brought her calm rather than despair.In Western cultures, conversations about death often remain taboo. Yet McCall’s openness reframes these discussions as empowering rather than morbid. Preparing for the inevitable, she argues, isn’t about expecting the worst but about ensuring peace of mind.Now fully recovered and with her final MRI scan showing no recurrence, McCall describes herself as profoundly changed. She is closer to her children, grateful for her health, and more committed than ever to advocating for women’s wellbeing. She has also formed an unlikely bond with the surgeon who saved her life.