A routine hospital visit to pick up my late mother’s paperwork changed my life when I met Malik, an eight-year-old boy crying alone on the oncology ward floor. Clutching his worn backpack, he whispered, “I don’t want my mom to die.” My heart broke, recalling my own grief from losing my mom to cancer. I sat with him, learning his mother, Mara, was battling lymphoma, and Malik was selling toys to help with her treatment costs.
The next day, I visited their sparse apartment, bringing muffins. Mara shared her struggle with stage 2 lymphoma and lapsed insurance. I offered to cover her treatment, connecting her with a trusted oncologist. Malik called me before Mara’s first chemo, scared and alone. I promised to stay with him, and we bonded over muffins in the hospital café, where he shared his fears and dreams of his mom’s recovery.