Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 250

I am Rukh Yusuf, Clinical Pharmacist, also specialized in Total Parenteral Nutrition and Bone Marrow Transplant. I have worked in the Pediatric Oncology unit of a public hospital. The mission of this blog is to bring to you the real-life stories of child patients suffering from cancer. Cancer is still a difficult disease to handle and treat. However, when it strikes the children, some so young that they cannot even speak, their agony is beyond expression and words. Let us pray especially for children suffering from cancer for early and complete remission. May Allah shower His Merciful Blessings upon them. Aameen.
The Quiet Weight of Ahmad’s Days
Ahmad is ten years old. He is at an age where life is supposed to be loud, filled with questions, movement, and small, ordinary chaos. But his days have become quiet in ways no child’s should. A few months ago, Ahmad was diagnosed with leukemia, and since then, silence has slowly settled into his life and the lives of those who love him.
The hospital became familiar before he had time to understand why. White corridors, waiting rooms, and carefully spoken conversations replaced classrooms and playgrounds. Doctors explained things gently, but Ahmad understood enough to know that something serious had taken hold of his body. He learned new routines quickly: blood tests, long hours of waiting, medicines that left him tired and sick. None of it felt dramatic. It was simply exhausting.
Leukemia did not take everything from Ahmad all at once. Instead, it arrived quietly and stayed. At first, he was just more tired than usual. Then he stopped finishing games. Eventually, he stopped asking to play at all. His body no longer responded the way it used to, and that loss was difficult to explain, even to himself.
Chemotherapy brought its own challenges. Food lost its flavor. Nausea became familiar. Pain settled into his bones and muscles. When his hair began to fall out, no one made a scene. Ahmad noticed anyway. He started wearing caps and pulling them low, not because anyone asked him to, but because it made the world feel easier to face.
School slowly slipped away from him. Missed days became missed weeks. Lessons continued without him, and friendships grew quieter. When classmates visited, they spoke carefully, unsure of what to say. Ahmad smiled for them, but after they left, the room felt larger and emptier than before.
Emotionally, the weight was constant. Ahmad rarely complained. When asked how he felt, he usually said he was fine. He seemed to understand, instinctively, that worry already filled the room. So he carried his fear quietly, believing silence was a form of strength.
For his family, the battle was equally unspoken. Their lives reorganized around hospital visits, test results, and medication schedules. Sleep came in short stretches. Conversations became cautious. There were questions they never asked out loud and fears they saved for moments when Ahmad could not hear.
Watching a child endure pain without being able to stop it changes a parent. There is a particular kind of helplessness in holding your child’s hand while knowing you cannot take the suffering away. Medical expenses added another layer of strain, but even that felt secondary to the emotional cost of watching Ahmad grow older in ways no child should have to.
Nights were the hardest. Pain does not rest when the world goes quiet. Some nights Ahmad lay awake, staring at the ceiling, waiting for discomfort to pass. One of his parents always stayed close, offering presence when answers were not possible.
And yet, life continued in small, fragile moments. A laugh during a cartoon. A short walk down the hospital hallway. A day when the pain eased just enough to breathe. These moments did not erase the struggle, but they reminded the family that hope can exist alongside fear.
Ahmad’s story is not loud. It does not ask for attention. It exists in quiet hospital rooms, in tired smiles, in the silent courage of a child and the steady love of a family doing everything they can.
This is what illness often looks like, not dramatic, not visible from the outside, but deeply human. A silent struggle carried day by day, where strength lies only in endurance.
Prayers for Ahmad and all the sick children and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen
Note: “The child’s name has been changed to protect privacy, and the accompanying image is AI-generated.”


