My father gave me a kidney – now I can do my dream wedding

My father gave me a kidney – now I can do my dream wedding

Angie brown
BBC Scotland, Edinburgh and East Reporter
Keran in
Bryan and his son Keran say they now have a strong bond after transplantation

Keran Ins was just 25 years old when she came to know about kidney failure and told her that she would need dialysis three times a week.

He was destroyed and worried that he would have to reduce a dream wedding and honeymoon plans with fiancé Lara Russell.

Two years later, his future has changed thanks to his kidney donor-him 63-year-old Dad Bryan.

“This 100% has strengthened our bonds, I feel forever as I favor him,” Kiran said. “Whatever I am doing now, it is because of it and I have no worry.”

Keran in
Keran is due to marrying Lara on 5 July

The couple are due to the knot in the upcoming, West Lothian next month, before jetting on “Minimoon” for New York next month, there was a honeymoon in Italy in October.

Pizza Chef, 27, said, “Things will be very different, I was still on dialysis.”

“We were planning a wedding anyway, but things were very different, I was still on dialysis and a honeymoon plan would have been a bit of a disaster.

“You can do this, but it includes NHS that arranges for dialysis in another country, which is incredible that they can do so, but would have been very difficult.”

In July 2022, when he was on a family holiday in Kullen, More, Kiran began to feel very unwell.

The next day at St. John Hospital in Livingston, he was told that his blood pressure was “through the roof”.

Six weeks later, Medix said that his kidneys were failing. He was fitted with a stent in his chest and placed on dialysis.

Brian Inse
Kiran arranged for a trip to Newcastle to thank his father

Keran “hated” when she was a stent. This made the shower difficult because it was not wet and was afraid of catching her clothes and bed sheets.

He was placed in the waiting list for a kidney, but was warned that it could take a long time.

So his fiance, Lara, 29, asked both his families to donate a live kidney.

“There was something that I was very upset about, I do not know how to remove that kind of thing, but I got a lot of help from my fiancé, she was really ahead to help me ask,” Kiran said.

Eight people came forward to offer their kidneys, including Lara’s father and Kiran’s brother and sister.

However, Kiran’s father chose the hospital to proceed with the operation in March 2024.

Brian Inse
Bryan and 11 -year -old Keran on a 2008 holiday in Marmaris in Türkiye

Bryan, who lives in Prestonpan in East Lothian, told BBC Scotland News how he was “worried and nervous” in the idea of ​​the operation.

The father’s seven said: “They go to the scenarios, with any surgery, have to be true, and he said that there was a chance of death and I was thinking of my other six children.

“However, the kidney transplant is now quite regular and although it was always behind my mind, I was not worried about it and once I decided that I was committed to it.”

Brian found it difficult to see how much his son was suffering on dialysis and wanted to do something to change the situation.

He said: “When I told him that I would give him a kidney and thought it is amazing that I am doing it for him.”

Brian Inse
Both Brian and Kiran at Nu Camp Stadium in Barcelona in February 2013

‘My husband needed a kidney, so I gave him his own’

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‘I donated a kidney to my son -in -law’

Brian, who has worked as a cameraman for BBC Scotland for more than 40 years, bounced back from the operation.

He was working on light duties after eight weeks and flew to cover the European Football Championship in Germany after four weeks in June 2024.

The kidney should last for about 25 years, which means that Kiran will require about three transplants in his lifetime.

So what would Bryan think about this father’s day?

“Obviously I have seven children, so you have got to think about them all, but I have a soft place for Kiran and what I did for him,” he said.

Kiran said: “I feel very happy now, I make my father the favor of my life. I am now able to get married to the stress-free of marriage and because of them I am marrying my dreams and planning to travel time with my siblings and fiancé and are planning to travel and then have children.”

Brian Inse
Bryan and his son Keran say they now have a strong bond after transplantation

For more information and support on organ implants, travel BBC Action Line,

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