Friday, June 19, 2026

Warriors and Survivors - 270

Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 270

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 Day Life Changed: Hilal’s Journey Through Nodular Lymphocyte-Predominant Hodgkin Lymphoma

In many families, childhood is measured through school years, birthdays, cricket matches in the street, favorite cartoons, and endless questions about the world. For ten-year-old Hilal and his family, however, one chapter of childhood came to be measured differently through clinic appointments, treatment schedules, blood tests, and the quiet wait for results.

When Hilal was diagnosed with Nodular Lymphocyte-Predominant Hodgkin Lymphoma (NLPHL), life did not stop all at once. In some ways, it continued exactly as before. School bags still sat by the door. Family conversations still happened around meals. Friends still called and visited. Yet underneath those familiar routines, everything felt different.

The first days after diagnosis were perhaps the hardest to understand.

For Hilal, cancer was not a word he fully grasped. What he understood was that adults around him suddenly looked worried. He noticed the extra hospital visits, the whispered conversations, and the way his parents tried to smile even when they were tired. Like many children, he focused less on the diagnosis itself and more on the immediate changes it brought to his everyday life.

For his parents, the experience was very different.

A diagnosis often arrives with an overwhelming number of questions and very few immediate answers. Families find themselves learning a new language of scans, laboratory reports, treatment plans, and follow-up appointments. Every appointment seems important. Every phone call from the hospital feels significant. Even ordinary days can feel uncertain.

As treatment began, the family settled into a routine they never expected to learn.

Hospital visits became part of the calendar. Some days were easier than others. There were mornings when Hilal felt almost like himself and evenings when treatment left him tired and quiet. There were days when he wanted to play and days when he preferred simply to rest.

Children often have a way of adapting to difficult circumstances without fully realizing it. Hilal continued to ask questions, laugh at jokes, and think about ordinary childhood things. Yet there were also moments when he missed the freedom of simply being a child without appointments to attend or medications to take.

For his family, the challenge extended beyond the hospital walls.

Cancer affects the rhythm of an entire household. Plans are postponed. Priorities shift. Parents learn to live between appointments, hoping for good news while preparing themselves for uncertainty. They become experts in noticing small changes a little more energy than yesterday, a better appetite, a stronger smile.

Some of the most difficult moments were not necessarily the treatment days themselves but the waiting. Waiting for results. Waiting for scans. Waiting for reassurance that things were moving in the right direction.

Yet alongside the uncertainty came countless moments of kindness.

A reassuring conversation with a physician. A nurse who remembered Hilal's favorite topic of conversation. Family members who checked in regularly. Friends who continued to treat him like Hilal rather than simply a patient.

At Khyber Teaching Hospital, Dr. Kashif Afridi and his team became an important part of this journey. Beyond managing the medical aspects of treatment, they provided something every family facing cancer needs: consistency. 

Over time, the focus gradually shifted.

The family stopped counting only the treatments that remained and began noticing the milestones they had already passed. Appointments that once felt intimidating became familiar. Procedures that seemed overwhelming became manageable. What initially felt impossible slowly became part of a routine that the family learned to navigate together.

There was no single dramatic moment when everything suddenly became easy. Instead, improvement arrived quietly.

A good report.

A reassuring scan.

A little more energy.

A return to familiar activities.

Conversations that gradually included more plans for the future and fewer discussions about treatment.

And then came January 2026, the end of treatment.

The date carried a significance that is difficult to put into words. It did not erase the months that came before it. It did not mean the family would forget the worry, the waiting, or the difficult days. Rather, it marked the closing of a chapter that had shaped each member of the family in different ways.

Today, as Hilal moves forward beyond treatment, his story serves as a reminder that behind every pediatric cancer diagnosis is a child who still wants to play, learn, laugh, and dream. 

There is a family doing its best to hold life together while facing challenges they never expected. And there are healthcare teams working quietly every day to help make recovery possible.

The end of treatment is not just the completion of a medical plan. It is the return of space for ordinary childhood moments, the very moments that families learn to value most after a long journey through cancer.

Prayers for these little angels and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen


Friday, June 12, 2026

Warriors and Survivors - 269

Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 269

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 Little Girl Who Still Loved Butterflies

Every evening, as the sun painted golden streaks across the courtyard, five-year-old Momina would run after butterflies.

She never managed to catch one.

Perhaps that was why she loved them so much.

"One day, I'll hold one in my hands," she would tell her mother, stretching her tiny fingers toward the fluttering wings before bursting into laughter when they escaped again.

For her family, those were ordinary days, the kind of days we rarely realize are precious until they begin to change.

It started with small things.

Momina sometimes rubbed one eye while watching cartoons. Occasionally she tilted her head strangely when looking at picture books. Her parents thought she might need glasses. Children often do, they reassured themselves.

Then one evening, while scrolling through family photographs, her father noticed something unusual.

In every picture, one of Momina's eyes reflected a strange white glow.

At first, it seemed insignificant. A camera flash. A trick of light.

But a parent's heart often notices what words cannot explain.

Within days, appointments replaced playground visits. Questions replaced certainty.

The family entered a world they had never imagined, a world of specialists, scans, unfamiliar medical terms, and waiting rooms filled with anxious faces.

Then came the diagnosis.

Retinoblastoma.

The room seemed to fall silent.

For a few moments, nobody heard the explanations that followed. Nobody remembered the diagrams or treatment plans. The only thing that remained was the feeling that life had suddenly divided itself into two parts: before that day and after it.

Momina, however, was mostly concerned about something else.

"Can we go home now?" she asked softly.

Her parents smiled through tears.

Children have a remarkable way of reminding us what truly matters.

Over the past six months, hospital visits have become woven into the fabric of Momina's childhood.

She now recognizes nurses by name. She knows which waiting room has the colorful fish painted on the wall. She knows that after some appointments she gets a sticker, and after difficult days her mother always buys her strawberry ice cream.

Yet none of this has been easy.

For a five-year-old, the hardest part is not understanding why everything is happening.

Momina doesn't understand scans.

She doesn't understand treatment protocols.

She doesn't understand why adults suddenly whisper when they think she isn't listening.

She only knows that some mornings begin earlier than they should, that hospitals smell different from home, and that her parents sometimes look worried even when they are smiling.

For her mother, every treatment day feels like holding her breath.

She packs snacks, water bottles, extra clothes, favorite toys, and endless hope into a single bag.

Then she sits beside her daughter and pretends to be brave.

Not because she isn't afraid.

But because mothers often carry their fear quietly so their children don't have to.

Her father has learned a different kind of strength.

He has become an expert at balancing responsibilities no one prepares you for—work deadlines, medical appointments, financial concerns, and the constant desire to be present for every moment.

Some nights, after Momina falls asleep, he sits beside her bed a little longer than usual.


Just watching.

Just grateful.

Just praying for tomorrow.

Cancer does not arrive alone.

It brings uncertainty.

It brings exhaustion.

It brings endless questions that rarely have immediate answers.

But strangely, it also reveals things that might otherwise remain hidden.

It reveals the kindness of nurses who kneel down to speak at a child's eye level.

It reveals friends who call simply to ask, "How was today's appointment?"

It reveals grandparents whose prayers become stronger than ever.

And it reveals a resilience that families never knew they possessed.

Through all of this, Momina remains wonderfully, stubbornly five years old.

She still argues about bedtime.

She still leaves crayons without their caps.

She still believes butterflies are magical.

One afternoon after a hospital visit, she spotted a butterfly resting on a flower near the parking lot.

For once, she didn't chase it.

She simply stood there and watched.

"Look, Mama," she whispered.

The butterfly opened and closed its wings slowly in the sunlight.

Beautiful.

Fragile.

Strong.

For a brief moment, everything else faded away.

No appointments.

No reports.

No worries about tomorrow.

Just a little girl and a butterfly sharing the same patch of sunshine.

Her mother squeezed her hand.

In that moment, she realized something important.

The journey was difficult.

There were still challenges ahead.

There would be more appointments, more waiting, and more uncertainty.

But there would also be moments like this.

Moments of laughter.

Moments of courage.

Moments of ordinary childhood hidden inside extraordinary circumstances.

Today, six months into treatment, Momina's story is not simply a story about cancer.

It is a story about a little girl who continues to dream.

A family that continues to hope.

And the quiet courage found in showing up, day after day, even when the path ahead is unclear.

The butterfly eventually flew away.

Momina watched it disappear into the evening sky and smiled.

Then she reached for her mother's hand and began walking home.

And somehow, that felt like its own kind of victory.

Prayers for these little angels and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen


Friday, June 5, 2026

Warriors and Survivors - 268

Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 268



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. 



Five Months Into a Journey No Family Ever Expects

Five-year-old Asad Ali used to spend most of his days running around the small courtyard outside his home. Like many children his age, he was curious about everything. He would ask endless questions, follow his older cousins wherever they went, and proudly show his parents every drawing he made.

His family lived a simple middle-class life. His father worked long hours, and his mother managed the home while caring for Asad and his siblings. Life was not perfect, but it was stable. They had plans, routines, and ordinary worries.

Then, one day, things started to change.

At first, it seemed like nothing serious. Asad became unusually tired. He wanted to be carried more often and preferred lying down instead of playing outside. His parents thought it might be a seasonal illness or weakness that would improve with rest.

But the tiredness did not go away.

Soon, other symptoms appeared. He developed frequent fevers. Small bruises appeared on his body even when he had not fallen or hurt himself. His appetite decreased, and his cheerful energy slowly disappeared.

His parents visited local clinics several times. Different medications were prescribed, and for brief moments they hoped things were improving. Yet something still felt wrong.

Eventually, they were referred for further testing.

For many families, there is a clear dividing line between life before a diagnosis and life after it. For Asad's family, that moment came when doctors confirmed that he had leukemia.

The word itself felt overwhelming.

His parents had heard of cancer before, but hearing it connected to their five-year-old son was something they could never have imagined. Questions immediately filled their minds.

How serious is it?

Will he recover?

What happens next?

How will we manage the treatment?

No parent is ever fully prepared for such conversations.

The weeks that followed were filled with hospital visits, blood tests, consultations, and treatment planning. Medical terms that once meant nothing suddenly became part of daily life. Every appointment seemed to bring new information, new decisions, and new uncertainties.

Today, Asad has been undergoing treatment for five months.

Five months may not sound like a long time, but for a child and his family, it can feel like an entirely different lifetime.

The hospital has become a familiar place. Nurses recognize him. Doctors know his case. His parents have learned to understand treatment schedules, laboratory reports, and medication instructions.

Yet familiarity does not make the cancer journey easier.

Some days are better than others.

On good days, Asad smiles, talks about his favorite cartoons, and asks when he can play outside with his friends again.

On difficult days, he becomes quiet. The side effects of treatment leave him exhausted. Sometimes he asks simple questions that are difficult for adults to answer.

"Why do I have to go to the hospital again?"

"When can I stay home all week?"

His parents do their best to respond with reassurance, even when they themselves are struggling to find certainty.

The financial burden is real, but for this family, the emotional burden is often even heavier.

Middle-class families frequently find themselves in a difficult position. They may not qualify for many forms of assistance, yet the costs associated with long-term treatment can steadily erode savings and financial security.

There are transportation expenses, laboratory tests, medications, missed workdays, and countless unexpected costs that appear throughout the treatment journey.

But beyond these visible challenges lies something less discussed.

The uncertainty.

Cancer treatment is not a straight road. Families learn to celebrate good reports while remaining cautious. They learn that progress can coexist with fear. They learn that hope and worry often exist together.

For Asad's parents, every phone call from the hospital can trigger anxiety. Every fever can feel alarming. Every new symptom raises questions.

They continue moving forward because there is no alternative.

Meanwhile, life outside the hospital continues.

Schools remain open. Children continue playing in parks. Birthdays are celebrated. Families gather for special occasions.

For parents caring for a child with cancer, there can be moments when they feel disconnected from the ordinary rhythm of life. Their world becomes organized around appointments, medications, and waiting for results.

This is one reason why awareness about pediatric oncology is so important.

When people hear the word cancer, they often think about adults. Yet many children around the world are facing diagnoses like leukemia, lymphoma, and other childhood cancers.

These children need more than medical treatment. Their families need emotional support, understanding, practical assistance, and access to reliable healthcare resources.

A simple message, a visit, help with transportation, assistance with childcare for siblings, or support during hospital stays can make a meaningful difference.

Asad's story is not unique.

There are many children like him whose families quietly navigate long treatment journeys while trying to maintain a sense of normalcy.

Five months into treatment, Asad's family continues to take things one day at a time.

They celebrate small improvements.

They attend every appointment.

They hold on to hope while accepting uncertainty.

And each morning, they continue doing what countless parents in similar situations do: showing up for their child, even on the days when they themselves feel exhausted.

Pediatric cancer affects more than a diagnosis. It affects families, routines, finances, emotions, and futures. By creating awareness and supporting affected families, we can help ensure that no child and no parent has to face this journey feeling alone.

Today, Asad's story reminds us that behind every hospital chart is a child who wants to play, learn, laugh, and simply enjoy being five years old.

Prayers for these little angels and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen


Friday, May 29, 2026

Warriors and Survivors Blog Post # 267

Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 267


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.



When the Hospital Visits Finally Stopped: Zaid’s Story After Wilms Tumor

In a small home in Jamrud District, Khyber, seven-year-old Zaid is slowly returning to the ordinary routines of childhood. A few months ago, his days were shaped by hospital visits, medicines, scans, long waits, and worried conversations between adults. Today, there are school notebooks on the floor again, unfinished cups of milk on the table, and cricket sounds coming from the street outside.

Zaid completed treatment for Wilms tumor on 06/05/2025 under treatment of Dr. Kashif Khan Afridi At Khyber Teaching Hospital Peshawar.

For many families, people assume the hardest part ends when treatment finishes. But recovery after childhood cancer is often quieter and more complicated than most imagine. Life does not suddenly return to normal overnight. Families carry exhaustion for months. Children slowly relearn comfort, routine, and confidence in their own bodies.

Zaid’s parents still remember the early days before diagnosis clearly. At first, the signs did not seem alarming. He complained of stomach discomfort from time to time. There were days when he looked unusually tired. His appetite changed. Like many parents, they initially thought it might be weakness, a stomach infection, or something temporary.

Then came the appointments, tests, and eventually the diagnosis that changed the rhythm of the entire household.

Wilms tumor, a type of kidney cancer mostly found in children, is something many families have never even heard of before they face it themselves. That unfamiliarity makes the experience even more frightening. Parents are suddenly expected to understand medical words, treatment schedules, side effects, and difficult decisions while emotionally trying to hold their family together.

For Zaid’s family, the months that followed revolved around treatment and travel. Living in Jamrud District meant long journeys for care. Hospital days often started early in the morning and ended late in the evening. Sometimes there was silence during the drive home because everyone was simply too tired to speak.

Cancer treatment changes small household routines in ways outsiders rarely notice. Meals become uncertain because children lose appetite. Sleep schedules disappear. Parents stop planning ahead because everything depends on the next report, the next fever, or the next hospital call.



Zaid’s mother noticed that even after difficult days, he still held onto small childhood habits. He would ask simple questions on the way home. Sometimes he wanted snacks from roadside shops. Sometimes he talked about cartoons or cricket matches as if nothing unusual was happening. Children often continue being children even in the middle of illness, and families quietly hold onto those moments.

Treatment also affects siblings and relatives in unseen ways. Attention shifts heavily toward the sick child, not by choice but by necessity. Families begin living in survival mode. Financial pressure builds slowly too transport costs, medicines, missed workdays, and temporary stays away from home become part of everyday life.

Now that treatment has ended, the family is trying to settle back into ordinary life again. But “ordinary” feels different after months of uncertainty.

Zaid still attends follow-up appointments. His parents still become anxious before scans or medical reviews. That fear does not disappear immediately when treatment ends. Many parents continue carrying silent worry long after doctors say their child is improving.

At home, however, there are signs of healing that cannot be measured in reports.

Zaid has started spending more time outside. He argues with other children during games again. He leaves toys scattered around the room. His mother says the house feels noisy in a comforting way now.

These details may sound small, but for families after cancer treatment, ordinary moments become deeply meaningful.

Stories like Zaid’s are also a reminder of why awareness matters. Childhood cancers do not only affect children living in major cities or wealthy households. Families in smaller districts and underserved areas face additional burdens, especially when specialized treatment centers are far from home.

Early attention to symptoms, timely diagnosis, emotional support for families, and access to proper treatment all make a difference.

Many parents ignore persistent swelling, fatigue, abdominal pain, or unusual changes because they hope the problem will pass on its own. Sometimes it does. Sometimes it does not. Awareness does not mean living in fear. It means understanding when a child’s body may be asking for attention.

Today, Zaid is no longer spending his weeks inside hospital wards. His family is learning how to breathe normally again after a long period of tension and uncertainty.

There is no dramatic ending to stories like this. Recovery is usually quiet.

It looks like a child returning to the street to play.

It sounds like laughter coming from another room after months of silence.

And for many families, that is already enough.

Prayers for these little angels and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen

Friday, May 22, 2026

Warriors and Survivors - 266

 Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 266



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. 



In a small home in Dara Adam Khel, near Kohat, a two-year-old girl named Eman Bibi slowly returned to the ordinary rhythm of childhood after months that had quietly changed her family’s life.

It began with something small. Her parents noticed that one of her eyes did not look the same in photographs. Sometimes there was a strange white reflection in her left eye. At first, they thought it might be a camera issue or a temporary problem. Like many parents, they hoped it would go away on its own.

But it did not.

After several visits and growing worry, Eman was diagnosed with left retinoblastoma, a rare eye cancer that mostly affects young children. For her parents, the word “cancer” felt impossible beside the name of their two-year-old daughter. They were not people who knew medical terms or hospital systems. They were simply parents trying to understand why their child suddenly needed scans, examinations, and treatment.

Their days slowly became divided between hospital visits and home. Toys were packed beside medical files. Family conversations became quieter. Small things began to matter more,  whether Eman ate properly that day, whether she slept peacefully after treatment, whether she smiled during the drive back home.

At Khyber Teaching Hospital (KTH), Dr. Kashif Afridi and his team became part of that difficult journey. In pediatric oncology, treatment is not only about medicines and procedures. It is also about helping families survive emotionally through weeks and months of uncertainty. Sometimes reassurance matters as much as treatment itself.

Eman was too young to understand what was happening around her. She only knew unfamiliar hospital rooms, bright lights, and worried faces looking down at her. Yet children often continue being children, even during illness. There were still moments when she laughed over something simple, reached for snacks, or held tightly onto a parent’s hand while falling asleep.

Her treatment continued for months and finally came to an end in November 2025.

Recently, during her follow-up examination, the family received the news they had quietly prayed for every day: there was no recurrence.

For many families outside pediatric oncology, such words may sound brief and clinical. But for parents who have spent nights fearing the future, they carry enormous relief. It does not erase the difficult memories, but it allows breathing room again. It allows hope to slowly return to ordinary life.

Stories like Eman’s exist in many parts of Pakistan, often unnoticed outside hospital walls. Families travel long distances from towns and villages carrying fear, financial pressure, and emotional exhaustion together. Many parents arrive with little awareness about childhood cancers and their early warning signs.

Retinoblastoma, especially, can sometimes first appear as a white glow in the eye, crossed eyes, or changes in vision. Early diagnosis can make a major difference. Awareness among parents and communities matters deeply because children cannot explain their symptoms themselves.

Eman’s story is not about dramatic words or extraordinary claims. It is about a little girl who deserved timely care, and a family that continued showing up for her through every appointment and examination.

Today, somewhere in Dara Adam Khel, she is likely doing what children should be doing moving around the house, playing, making small demands, and slowly leaving hospital memories behind.

And for her parents, that ordinary childhood may now feel like the greatest blessing of all.

Prayers for these little angels and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen


Friday, May 15, 2026

Warriors and Survivors - 265

Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 265


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. 




It was a routine workday for everyone in the children’s hospital cancer ward. I was making my rounds in one of the blood disorder rooms, verifying chemotherapy as part of my daily responsibilities as a pharmacist in pediatric oncology. The ward was calm, familiar the soft hum of machines, the gentle beep of monitors, and the quiet shuffle of staff. Normally, when you walk into a room with five or six children, it buzzes with chatter, laughter, and the clatter of toys. But in this cancer ward, the room was unusually quiet. The only sound was the steady hum of machines, a faint beeping rhythm, and an occasional rustle of a parent’s hand smoothing a blanket.

As I continued my checks, I noticed him about 8 or 10 years old and though he arrived with his mother, he looked like a perfectly healthy child. His bright smile, lively energy, and neat clothes suggested a carefree playground, and his family seemed well-off. No one would have guessed, just by looking, how dire his situation was. He had been brought in from the ER after feeling suddenly sick. After being stabilized in the ER, he was admitted to our ward, but despite his outward strength, a fragile storm lingered beneath his smile. As I continued my rounds, he began to look more distressed. My heart sank, and I immediately checked his chart he had T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a rare, aggressive cancer that attacks the immune system’s T-cells. I reviewed his medication orders, confirming he had received everything as prescribed. The doctor had ordered, and I double-checked that he had taken them. Still uneasy, the on-call physician, adjusted his care plan, prioritizing his comfort and stability.

As the afternoon passed, I carried out my tasks, making sure he received his meds along with his chemotherapy. The nausea was so overwhelming, and even though these tasks were routine, there was a heaviness I couldn’t shake. He was just a child so full of potential, so unaware of how fast things were unraveling. After I completed my shift, I left, but his face stayed with me. That evening, as the quiet settled in at home, I couldn’t stop picturing him how he laughed, how he played with his mother, so unaware of the storm inside him. I barely slept, and the next morning, before my rounds, I called the doctor on duty, the shift lead, just to ask how he was. And it was then, in that quiet moment, that I learned he had passed away. I was frozen no words came. For days, I struggled; every simple task felt like a mountain, every word trapped inside.

I kept thinking if I, as a healthcare provider who barely knew him, could be so shaken, how must his parents feel? They had seen a vibrant child, full of potential, and in just a few short hours, he was gone. No one can ever fully grasp that kind of grief the sudden rupture of a future so full of promise. And so, I share this not for shock, but to remind us all how fragile life is how every child, even one who looks perfectly well, can be facing an invisible battle, and a future stolen in an instant. 

Prayers for these little angels and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen


Friday, May 8, 2026

Warriors and Survivors - Children Cancer Stories by Rukh Yusuf - Blog # 264

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. 

Ahad’s Quiet Battle With T-Cell Leukemia

Ahad is only eight years old, but the last six months of his life have looked very different from what childhood is usually supposed to be. Instead of worrying about school homework, cricket matches in the street, or cartoons before bedtime, much of his time has been spent in hospital rooms, treatment centers, and long journeys between medical appointments. His family now measures time through blood reports, chemotherapy cycles, and days when his fever stays low enough for him to rest peacefully.

Ahad lives in Lahore Pakistan with his parents and two younger siblings. Before his illness, he was an energetic child who enjoyed drawing cars and playing outside with neighborhood children. His father works long shifts to support the family, while his mother stays home to care for the children. Their life was not luxurious, but it was stable enough to get by quietly. That stability slowly began to disappear when Ahad started becoming unusually tired.

At first, the symptoms did not seem alarming. He complained about body pain and often looked exhausted after school. His mother noticed that he had become pale and less interested in playing. Soon, he began developing repeated fevers that would temporarily improve with medicines but return again within days. There were nights when he cried because of pain in his legs, and mornings when he struggled to get out of bed.

His parents initially believed it was a prolonged infection or weakness. Like many families, they moved between local clinics, hoping simple medicines would solve the problem. But after several weeks, Ahad’s condition became worse. He started losing weight, bruises appeared easily on his arms, and his breathing became heavier than usual. Eventually, doctors advised urgent blood tests and further evaluation at a larger hospital.

That was when his family first heard the words “T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.”

T-cell ALL is a type of blood cancer that affects white blood cells called lymphocytes. In this disease, abnormal cells grow rapidly inside the bone marrow and interfere with the body’s ability to produce healthy blood cells. Although acute lymphoblastic leukemia is the most common childhood cancer worldwide, T-cell ALL is considered a more aggressive subtype and often requires intensive treatment. The disease can progress quickly, and despite improvements in therapy over recent decades, the treatment journey remains physically and emotionally difficult for many children and families.

Globally, thousands of children are diagnosed with leukemia each year, and countries with limited healthcare resources often face additional challenges in timely diagnosis and long-term treatment access. In Pakistan, childhood leukemia continues to place a heavy burden on families, particularly those already struggling financially. Delayed diagnosis, transportation issues, treatment expenses, and emotional stress can affect every aspect of daily life.

For Ahad’s family, the diagnosis felt unreal at first. His parents describe sitting silently in the hospital corridor after the doctors explained the disease. They did not fully understand the medical terminology, but they understood enough to know that their son’s future had suddenly become uncertain.

Since then, life has revolved around treatment schedules. Chemotherapy has left Ahad weak, nauseated, and emotionally drained. Some days he barely speaks. On other days, he quietly asks when he can return to school or play outside again. His hair has become thinner, and repeated hospital stays have made him anxious around needles and medical equipment. His younger siblings struggle to understand why their brother cannot join them the way he used to.

The illness has also affected the family beyond the hospital walls. Ahad’s father has missed work repeatedly to travel for appointments and arrange medicines. Financial pressure has slowly accumulated through transportation costs, laboratory tests, supportive medications, and time away from employment. His mother rarely sleeps properly now, often staying awake to monitor fevers or side effects after treatment sessions.

The emotional strain is harder to describe. There is constant uncertainty in households facing childhood cancer. Families learn to live between hope and fear without speaking openly about either. There are moments of relief when blood counts improve, followed by anxiety before the next hospital visit. Even ordinary conversations gradually change. Discussions about school fees, groceries, and family plans are replaced with conversations about test results and treatment responses.

Ahad does not fully understand the seriousness of his disease, but he understands enough to notice how much his parents worry. Sometimes he watches other children playing outside the hospital window while quietly sitting beside his mother. Other times, he asks whether he will be able to celebrate his next birthday at home.

There is no dramatic ending to stories like Ahad’s. Families living through childhood leukemia often continue carrying silent emotional and financial burdens long after treatment begins. Their struggle is usually quiet, hidden behind hospital walls and ordinary conversations.

For Ahad and his family, each day is simply about continuing forward, one appointment, one treatment cycle, and one uncertain tomorrow at a time.

Prayers for these little angels and their families who have to face this pain of cancer. May Allah make it easy for them. Aameen


Blog Post # 03 by Rukh Yusuf