The ache in his shoulder had been lingering for months, but Luke Grenfell-Shaw, just 23 at the time, shrugged it off as not worth fretting about. Besides, he was too busy to worry, working as an English teacher in Siberia, Russia. Each day began with a run around the park, followed by a short bike ride to the school. He remembers not being able to lean back in his chair without wincing in pain. Eventually, it got too bothersome and he sought out the school nurse, pulling up his shirt to expose the painful shoulder. Her reaction – “oh my God” – confirmed this was no normal ache.

Curious to see what was so shocking, Grenfell-Shaw stood in front of a mirror and took a photo of his back. His left shoulder, he could see, bulged like a powerlifter’s – far bigger than the opposite side. “Ah, that doesn’t look right,” he remembers thinking – still not panicking. Within two days, however, he was back in the UK receiving a life-changing diagnosis: the lump was a rare form of cancer that had metastasised to his lungs and was now stage four – advanced and aggressive. The doctors called it a malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumour, and the medical literature did not offer much hope.

“You can see the survival rates for yourself,” he tells me, not wanting to repeat the figures. Patients with this type of cancer typically have a less than 50% chance of surviving beyond five years. Grenfell-Shaw received a prognosis of months – “two years maximum” – and yet, that was eight years ago, in 2018. Come his 26th birthday, in 2020, he was riding a tandem across the world, from his hometown of Bristol to Beijing in China, raising money for cancer charities. “I didn’t know if I’d live to the end of that year [2020],” he says. “The fact that I’m alive now is totally remarkable, and immensely…” his voice stalls. “I’m just very, very lucky. By luck more than anything else, I’m still here.”

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Luke Grenfell-Shaw in a pink jersey with a tandem

A photo stop in Odessa, Ukraine.

(Image credit: Luke Grenfell-Shaw)

turbo trainer in the hospital ward so he could spin his legs while his arm was rigged up to the drip. Midway through his treatment, he ran the Bristol Half Marathon, clocking 80 minutes – a good time for a fully fit amateur, let alone one with stage-four cancer.

Once he had finished chemo, Grenfell-Shaw set about organising his tandem ride to Beijing. He would take the front, leaving the stoker’s seat empty for whichever family, friends or strangers felt moved to join him along the way. “If I only had one year left to live, then that was probably the most interesting, experience-filled way of living it,” he reasoned.

The story of the ride is told in the documentary A Life in Tandem (available to watch for free on YouTube from 8pm UK time today), in which Grenfell-Shaw speaks candidly about his diagnosis, the sudden death five weeks later of his older brother John, aged 25, on a hiking trip in the Lake District – “when John died, I knew I had to survive” – and his parents’ subsequent separation. It is a story of a family’s remarkable resilience in the face of unimaginable adversity.

Leaving his old school in Bristol on New Year’s Day 2020, Grenfell-Shaw headed east through Europe, beyond Ukraine, Turkey and Kazakhstan, across Central Asia, and south into India. Covid restrictions prevented him from crossing into China, halting his dream of reaching Beijing. He flew back to the UK and completed the 30,000km distance as a fundraising effort on a turbo trainer. The whole adventure took two-and-a-half years, and saw him accompanied by more than 800 people on his tandem – including a standout character of the documentary, a 17-year-old called Dev who joined him for 1,000km across India. In total, the campaign raised £131,000 for charity and earned Grenfell-Shaw an MBE in 2024.

Luke Grenfell-Shaw in a pink jersey with his friend Dev

Fun times with Indian companion Dev.

(Image credit: Luke Grenfell-Shaw)

premieres for free on YouTube at 8pm UK time this evening, 26 February.

This feature originally appeared in Cycling Weekly magazine on 19 February 2026. Subscribe now and never miss an issue.