Doctor Said She Had 7 Months To Live — Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, Chemo, Relapse, And A Stem Cell Transplant Gave This Mom A Second Chance

“You have seven months to live if we don’t begin treatment right away.”

Seven months. I silently counted them out in my head — 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6… 7 — as if saying the number over and over might somehow make it less real.

It was October 2018. I was working 60–70 hours a week, laser-focused on climbing the corporate ladder, convincing myself I didn’t have time for anything — especially not illness. For six months I’d been dealing with strange symptoms: itchy legs, fatigue, dizzy spells, shortness of breath, and unexplained weight loss. Doctor after doctor reassured me everything looked fine. I thought, Perfect. I don’t have time to be sick anyway.

Man and woman smiling

Then the back and neck pain started. Reluctantly, I headed to yet another appointment searching for answers. While sitting in the waiting room, I reached up to rub my neck and froze. There, on the lower left side, was a large lump. My stomach dropped. Instinctively, I pulled out my phone and asked Dr. Google — and of course, it told me what it always tells everyone: cancer. I pushed the thought away, convincing myself Google is dramatic.

I’m an anxious person by nature, so I kept touching the lump, showing it to family and friends. Each time someone said, “It’s probably nothing,” it soothed me for a moment — except my mom. She insisted I go to the ER. My husband and I walked in, explained why we were there, and were taken back immediately. That alone scared me. The ER doctor examined the lump, called it a swollen lymph node, and said it was probably nothing — but ordered a chest X-ray “just to be safe.” She told us we’d likely be out within the hour.

Cancer warrior smiling at camera

While waiting for results, I was already mentally planning my evening: deadlines, emails, projects. No room for sickness. Then the doctor walked back in — crying — holding a teddy bear. She sat beside me and gently said words that split my life into before and after: “I’m so sorry. We found large masses in your chest. I believe it may be lymphoma. Cancer.” Later I learned she’d once had a friend with lymphoma — and that connection was why she insisted on the X-ray another doctor might have skipped.

The moment she left, I turned to my husband and sobbed, “I don’t want to lose my hair.” Within 24 hours I had my first surgery, an oncology appointment scheduled, and a new title stamped on my life: patient. Wife, mom, friend, employee — all of it faded behind that single word.

A week later, my biopsy results appeared on my phone while I was eating at Chick-fil-A. Cancer with a side of chicken sandwich. I went home, lay on the floor, and cried until I couldn’t breathe. Soon after, I sat in a cancer center listening to my oncologist explain I had Hodgkin’s Lymphoma — the so-called “good cancer.” But in the next breath he said I had seven months to live without treatment. It didn’t sound good at all.

For the next seven months, I endured 12 rounds of brutal chemotherapy and countless complications. People kept calling me brave, strong, inspirational. I didn’t feel like any of those things. I felt broken — like the person I used to be had vanished.

Woman and daughter smiling

Six weeks after finishing chemo, desperate to feel normal again, I went back to work. My coworkers looked at me as if they’d seen a ghost. They complimented my “haircut,” not realizing it wasn’t a style choice. Someone joked about my “seven-month vacation.” I smiled, but inside I wanted to scream. I was alive — when I wasn’t supposed to be — and somehow that was supposed to make everything feel okay.

Two months later, I completely unraveled. Driving home, I burst into tears. I had fought for my life, and now I was expected to care about office gossip. My oncologist gave me the standard “See you in three months,” and suddenly I felt abandoned, terrified the cancer would return. No movie prepares you for how hard life after treatment truly is.

Woman undergoing chemotherapy

By October 2019, it did return. My PET scan — scheduled almost exactly a year after my diagnosis — showed relapse. I felt like I’d failed everyone. I went to work the next morning just to finish my tasks, sat at my desk staring at meaningless papers, and then quietly left. I never went back.

I transferred my care to Mayo Clinic, where I learned I needed a stem cell transplant. High-dose chemo, weeks in the hospital, and an entire year living like a newborn with no immune system. It was terrifying, but the alternative was death — and I had a child to stay alive for.

Woman showing chemo hair loss

Before I could qualify for transplant, I needed remission. I started a newer, lighter treatment that allowed my hair to stay a bit longer. At the same time, I stopped pretending everything was fine. I turned on my camera and started talking honestly — about fear, loneliness, and the lies wrapped inside the phrase “Let me know if you need anything.” Sharing on YouTube became therapy and a lifeline for others who felt the same.

Professional family photos

After three treatments, I scanned again. My doctor was sure I’d be in remission — but the results showed the cancer had spread. I saw sadness flicker in his eyes. I felt certain I was going to die. I was admitted for intense inpatient chemo and became sicker than ever before.

Woman and daughter

Two weeks later, my hair fell out again — and somehow it hurt worse the second time. I filmed myself pulling it out, showing the raw reality no photoshoot could sugarcoat.

Then March 2020 arrived. While the world shut down for a pandemic, I learned I was finally in remission and cleared for transplant. My stem-cell “re-birthday” was delayed one day due to a pending COVID test and landed on April Fool’s Day — fitting, because life truly felt like a joke.

Husband and wife kissing

The transplant was the hardest battle I’ve ever faced. My husband cared for me when I could barely walk. I was only 29 but felt ancient. The transplant saved my life — but it took things too: infertility, PTSD, depression, anxiety, ADHD, and the constant hum of cancer in the back of my mind.

But it also gave me purpose. I began drawing — honest, sometimes funny illustrations about cancer realities: losing hair everywhere, mental health struggles, body image issues, grief. People online responded immediately, telling me my honesty made them feel less alone. On days I felt isolated, their messages reminded me that maybe all of this meant something.

Today, a little over a year post-transplant, I’m still in remission. My scans have stretched to every six months, and each clean result feels like another breath I get to take. I once read that people who survive fires carry buckets of water back for those still burning. That’s what I hope my art does — even in some small way — and for that, I’m deeply, overwhelmingly grateful.

Cancer warrior in remission smiling at camera

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