Pickleball Magazine 5-2 WD | Page 50

Sharing a Cancer Diagnosis: Stepsisters’ Story O livia and Natalie, relating it separately, recall their first meeting the same way. “We met at a splash pad,” said Olivia. “She just came up to me and hugged me, and we started playing,” said Natalie. A pair of 4-year-old girls with long, brown hair, making instant friends at the park. Not yet knowing they would soon be stepsisters. No one knowing that nearly a decade later, their easy bond would be deepened by circumstances not only unpredictable, but unthinkable. Unbelievable. At 13, these stepsisters would be diagnosed with cancer: the same type, in the same leg, just weeks apart. Olivia was at the splash pad with her father, Chad. Chad, divorced from Olivia’s mom, Bobbie, had Olivia every other weekend and was dating Stacy, a single mother to Natalie and Noah. If it sounds confusing, it felt straightforward. “We immediately became a family of five,” said Stacy. Chad and Stacy were married in October 2011, when the girls were 5, and although Olivia did not live with them full-time, the family dynamic was very blended. Even after Olivia moved away in the fifth grade, the girls still saw each other on alternate weekends, every other Thanksgiving, on Christmas Eve, and for a few weeks each summer. The summer of 2018 began the turning point in both families’ lives. From the very onset of Olivia’s leg pain, Bobbie had doubts. The pediatrician favored a meniscal tear, but come the day of the MRI, said Bobbie, “I had already been preparing myself for this to not be just a meniscal tear because I’m a nurse, and I knew that 46 TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL 888.308.3720 OR GO TO THEPICKLEBALLMAG.COM By Kelly Cox she did not present with the symptoms of just having a meniscal tear.” And she wasn’t the only one with concerns. On the way into the scan, Olivia looked at her and confessed, “‘Mom, I dreamed last night that I had to have my leg cut off because this is cancer.’” Bobbie calmed her sobbing daughter, but it was a little like the cards had been tipped to show the hand. The look on the tech’s face just sealed it. Their eerie feeling stayed an unspoken fear until the phone call. “The word ‘cancer,’ you know. As a mother, you have these ‘We don’t go there’ thoughts,” Bobbie said. “The whole time your baby is growing up, you worry: What if? What if? What if? And cancer really is like the worst what-if...” It was “obviously sarcoma, a big, huge, funky tumor” on Olivia’s right femur. She was immediately referred to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and arrived the day after her scan to an official diagnosis of osteosarcoma—bone cancer—and the first of many weeks of chemotherapy. Almost right away, it seemed like the news would get worse. Two spots showed up that might have indicated metastases to the lungs. “When we found out that was negative, that was a good day,” Stacy remembered. A dark day was soon St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital to follow. campus exterior. ‘This can’t be real’ “It’s the craziest thing anybody’s ever heard,” said Bobbie. “Whenever I tell the story, it’s hard for people to know how to react because they just can’t believe it.” After about a month, Stacy and Chad arrived at Unbelievable set of coincidences brings two families closer together.