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Carlos is
Blood Cancer United

Here’s SEO‑driven, descriptive alt text that includes **blood cancer**, stays objective, and avoids assumptions about the person:  **Alt text:**   Person seated in a medical infusion chair wearing a headset and baseball cap, with a visible IV line connected to a chest port during blood cancer treatment; an infusion pump and IV tubing are visible beside the chair in a clinical care setting.

I am a 42-year-old Hispanic male. I was diagnosed with cancer at 41, but did not begin treatment until my 42nd birthday. I am the father of a beautiful seven-year-old daughter and the sole provider for my family. One of the most difficult aspects of my journey was how long it took to receive a clear diagnosis. From the first signs that something was wrong to confirmation, approximately six to eight months passed. During that time, I genuinely did not believe I had cancer. It was never framed with urgency or clarity, and as a result, I did not approach it with the seriousness the situation warranted. In hindsight, this is something I wish had been different. Had I known earlier, I would have advocated for myself more aggressively, explored supportive lifestyle and nutritional changes sooner, and been more proactive overall. Instead, uncertainty created delay, both emotionally and practically. Very early in my treatment, however, I realized that my mindset would be one of the most important factors in how I experienced this process. I understood that my outlook before, during, and after treatment would directly impact not only my quality of life, but also how manageable the journey would feel. This belief did not originate with cancer. I have lived much of my adult life by a simple principle: I do not stress over things that are outside of my control. That mindset has guided me long before my diagnosis, particularly as someone responsible for supporting a family. Still, when cancer first entered the conversation, it affected me deeply. The fear came from the unknown. 

The word “cancer” was introduced without explanation, and then I was left waiting. For months, I did not know what type it was, what stage it might be, or what the prognosis could look like. When I first told my girlfriend that it was likely cancer, I broke down completely. Then, just before a planned weekend cruise with my daughter, I received a call from an oncologist. The tone of the conversation suggested urgency and seriousness, and an appointment was scheduled for immediately after we returned. That call cast a shadow over the entire trip. I tried to remain present for my family, but the weight of uncertainty was constant. My girlfriend noticed the change right away. I still hope my daughter did not. During the cruise, there was a moment when it was just my daughter and me. We had gone to take photos with some of the onboard characters, and she referred to it as a “Daddy-Daughter Date.” Later that evening, she wasn’t ready to end the night and asked if we could keep spending time together. We found a small jazz lounge, family-friendly, with a modest dance floor. She asked if we could dance. We did. And in the middle of that moment, the reality of my diagnosis came rushing back. The thought hit me suddenly that I did not yet know what I was facing, and that there was a possibility, however undefined at the time, that this could be the last dance I ever shared with her. That realization nearly broke me. I wanted to cry. I wanted to let the fear surface. But I also knew that if this moment became one of her lasting memories, then I had a responsibility to protect it. I stayed present. I kept smiling. I made sure that what she experienced was joy, warmth, and love. I refused to let fear define that moment for her. After she fell asleep that night, I told my girlfriend I needed to step outside for some air. As I walked the deck alone, darker thoughts crept in. I had already experienced the pain of watching a parent decline due to illness. I knew what it felt like to witness someone you love deteriorate while feeling powerless to stop it. That experience had already shaped my life once, and the idea of my daughter enduring something similar was unbearable. Eventually, I sat quietly on the deck, under the stars, watching a movie play against the night sky. In that stillness, I made a decision. I reminded myself that I had always believed in not stressing over what I could not control. The reality was that I had cancer, and nothing could change that. What could change was how I responded. I accepted that this experience would either take something from me or shape me into a better man. Once I made peace with that, the weight lifted. My focus shifted to what I could control: showing up to appointments, advocating for myself, making healthier choices where possible, maintaining perspective, and staying mentally grounded. 

Throughout my diagnosis and treatment, I continued working without taking time off. As the sole provider for my family, maintaining stability was important to me. There were days when side effects made working physically and mentally difficult, but I remained committed to balancing treatment, recovery, and professional responsibility. Staying engaged in my work provided structure, normalcy, and purpose during an otherwise uncertain time. That mindset came naturally to me. I’ve always leaned on humor, perspective, and resilience. As the sole provider for my family, I knew I could not allow cancer to dictate how I lived my life. I saw it as life placing an obstacle directly in front of me, and my responsibility was to face it head-on and keep moving forward. Cancer knocked me down more than once. There were moments that landed me in the emergency room. But being knocked down is not the same as being defeated. Each time, I focused on getting back up, recalibrating, and continuing forward. I adopted a mentality of resilience: take the hit, get back up, and keep moving. I understood there was always a possibility that the fight could end in a way I could not control. But if that day came, I wanted to know I had given everything I had. That I showed up fully for my family. 

One additional thing that helped preserve my sanity throughout this process was humor. I’ve always had a good sense of humor, but cancer, in its own way, expanded that toolkit. It opened access to jokes that previously weren’t mine to make. I joked openly about my diagnosis, often at my own expense. At times, that made people uncomfortable, unsure whether it was appropriate to laugh. But in many ways, that discomfort served a purpose. It allowed me to demonstrate that fear was not controlling me, and it helped ease the anxiety of those around me. When one person is diagnosed with cancer, everyone close to them carries it as well. While I understood that my condition was highly treatable and survivable once I had clarity, many of my loved ones were far more distressed than I was. By maintaining humor and calm, I hoped to offer reassurance and help reduce the emotional weight they were carrying. I did not want my illness to dominate every interaction or define how people saw me. Over time, I learned that this approach had an impact beyond my immediate circle. One of my cousins’ children, who is about 25 years old, shared with me on several occasions how much he admired the way I handled my diagnosis and treatment. He told me that my attitude, my humor, and my refusal to let cancer keep me down made a lasting impression on him. He said that not once did he see me depressed or defeated, and that my outlook gave him a different perspective on what it meant to face adversity. 

Unfortunately, his admiration has taken on new meaning. His mother has since been diagnosed with the same type of cancer I had. My hope now is that what he saw during my journey helps him and his family navigate their own. If my experience can provide even a small measure of strength, perspective, or reassurance to someone else walking this path, then it has meaning beyond my own survival. At no point did I seek pity. If anything, I tried to remain steady and forward-facing, and when possible, a source of encouragement. Cancer was part of my story, but it was never allowed to become the author of my life.

Carlos

blood cancer

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