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Cancer-stricken mother's heartbreak after son's chilling confession
Cancer-stricken mother's heartbreak after son's chilling confession

Daily Mail​

time14 hours ago

  • Health
  • Daily Mail​

Cancer-stricken mother's heartbreak after son's chilling confession

Misty De La Cruz is battling an aggressive cancer, but that isn't what's devastating her. The mother of eight was diagnosed with stage three triple-negative breast cancer in 2023. She sat down with her children and openly explained to them what her cancer diagnosis was and what it meant for the family going forward. Since her diagnosis, De La Cruz, 43, has undergone weeks of chemotherapy treatments, surgeries with another to come, and has just begun immunotherapy. People with this stage of triple-negative breast cancer have a five-year survival rate of up to 65 percent, but De La Cruz's prognosis is far more dim, telling her followers on TikTok that she has a 20 percent chance of beating cancer. De La Cruz typically records in one of two poses: lying down due to crippling fatigue that renders her bedbound some days, or driving to a doctor's appointment, whether it's to see a dermatologist from a facial rash due to chemo or the dentist to repair her decaying teeth. The true toll her cancer diagnosis is taking on the family was highlighted last month when the Maryland resident received a phone call from her son's school that broke her heart, she said. The school nurse told her the boy, now 10, had been unusually tired during the day. When asked why, he mentioned said he was staying up most nights 'because he thinks that while he's asleep, I'm going to die,' De La Cruz said. 'There's so much more to this process than just us battling cancer… It's the fact that our kids are so traumatized,' De La Cruz added. 'As a parent you try to be strong for your children, but they watch you slowly change into someone completely different. 'He was crying, and the only thing he asked was if I was going to die. I tried to reassure him that the doctors were going to do the best that they could do to make sure that that didn't happen. But ultimately, there is never a promise from anyone, but I was gonna fight as hard as I could.' Two years ago, at 41, De La Cruz began experiencing pain in her right breast during her period, a pain, she told PEOPLE, that 'felt a little bit different' from standard breast pain many women experience during their cycles. It persisted over several months until she went to see her gynecologist, who performed a standard mammogram and manual exam of her breasts. Nothing looked suspicious, though her doctor noted that De La Cruz had dense breast tissue, which can make detecting nodules more difficult. De La Cruz went about her life as a busy working mom but said she harbored a feeling of uncertainty. Doctors brushed off her concerns, citing the healthy-looking mammogram. However, last summer, when doing her regular monthly manual breast exams, she found a pea-sized knot in her right breast that was not there the month before. She was back in her doctor's office within days and taken for another mammogram as well as an ultrasound, which can sometimes pick up on tumors hidden within dense breast tissue that a standard mammogram may miss. Doctors rushed to perform a biopsy, 'and within 48 hours, I had the results for that biopsy… and it came back for stage 2 triple-negative breast cancer.' But an oncologist soon informed her that the cancer was actually at stage 3 and had spread to her lymph nodes. 'So we needed to start immediately,' De La Cruz said. 'It's going to wreak havoc and spreads especially quicker now because I had the biopsy and the mammogram, because radiation and agitating the tumor causes it to go crazy.' She began chemo within the week. 'I still wasn't sick,' she added. 'I really didn't start getting sick until I started chemo,' which causes nausea, exhaustion, hair loss, and a whole list of side effects that hit harder than the disease itself. The ensuing chemotherapy treatments ravaged De La Cruz's body, causing such severe vomiting that her teeth began to rot, lethargy that left her bound to the couch, a rash across her face, and constant brain fog. Roughly 65 percent of women diagnosed with stage three triple negative breast cancer survive five years after their diagnosis. At this stage, the aggressive cancer has spread to the lymph nodes, six of which De La Cruz had surgically removed last month. She recently learned that she carries a mutation on the BRCA2 gene that impedes the body's ability to repair damaged DNA, allowing cells to accumulate damage and grow out of control, a hallmark of cancer. Women with this mutation have a 45 to 69 percent chance of developing cancer, and De La Cruz now worries for her daughters. At 43, De La Cruz is not your typical cancer patient. Breast cancer is most common in women over 50, with the highest rates occurring in women over 70. Yet signs are pointing to a spike in breast cancer among younger women. Radiologists affiliated with the American College of Radiology reported last year that new diagnoses of breast cancer in patients 20 to 39 rose by nearly three percent from 2004 to 2021, compared to just a 1.4 percent rise among women in their 70s. They also found that cases in patients 40 to 74 increased by two percent per year from 2004 to 2012. But from 2018 to 2021, there was a 2.7 percent yearly increase. Doctors have attributed rising levels of new advanced cancer diagnoses to federal guidelines that recommend mammograms starting at age 40. Watching their mother fight cancer and the effects of chemo took a toll on her children. She recounted a trip to the store with one of her sons who, while holding her hand, said he wished he had cancer instead of her. Another time, one of her sons went to sit with her on the couch and would not let go of her arm. He cried, 'Please don't die, mom.' 'I handle a lot of stuff that comes with my cancer,' she said. 'At the end of the day… I have to deal with the fact that they tell me I only have a 20 percent survival rate.' De La Cruz underwent surgery to remove six lymph nodes to mitigate the spread of her cancer. She will also undergo a double mastectomy, but can only do so after she finishes recovering from a breast reduction procedure. She started a GoFundMe to help pay the exorbitant costs. Despite her prognosis, De La Cruz tries to retain some type of normalcy for her children. She said: 'No matter how sick I am, every Sunday our family has a Sunday dinner. Usually, I'm the one to do all the cooking, but we've had to improvise.'

Mom of 8 with Stage 3 Breast Cancer Breaks Down in Tears After Unexpected Call From School Nurse (Exclusive)
Mom of 8 with Stage 3 Breast Cancer Breaks Down in Tears After Unexpected Call From School Nurse (Exclusive)

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Mom of 8 with Stage 3 Breast Cancer Breaks Down in Tears After Unexpected Call From School Nurse (Exclusive)

Misty De La Cruz is a mother of eight who is battling an aggressive form of breast cancer Since her diagnosis in 2024, the 43-year-old has been open about her health struggles with her family, and especially with her children De La Cruz was heartbroken after she received an unexpected call from the elementary school nurse regarding her younger sonMisty De La Cruz was diagnosed with stage 3 triple-negative breast cancer in September 2024 after discovering a lump during one of her monthly self-exams. In May 2025, the Maryland-based mother of eight received an unexpected call from her son's elementary school. Over the phone, a nurse explained that the 10-year-old was frequently exhausted during school hours, telling the staff he's afraid to fall asleep most nights in fear that his mom might pass away overnight. De La Cruz filmed her emotional reaction to the heartbreaking phone call on TikTok, amassing over 3 million views. De La Cruz, who is battling the side effects of treatment while trying to maintain a stable family, says the emotional toll cancer takes extends far beyond the physical. For her, it's not just about surviving, it's about holding together a household deeply affected by fear and uncertainty. 'As a parent you try to be strong for your children, but they watch you slowly change into someone completely different,' De La Cruz tells PEOPLE exclusively. After her diagnosis, the 43-year-old sat down with her older children and was honest about what she was facing. It took a bit more time to have that conversation with her younger son. When she finally did, De La Cruz spoke with him one-on-one, gently explaining what cancer is and how it would impact both her health and their daily lives. 'He was crying, and the only thing he asked was if I was going to die,' she recalls. 'I tried to reassure him that the doctors were going to do the best that they could do to make sure that that didn't happen. But ultimately, there is never a promise from anyone, but I was gonna fight as hard as I could.' As months pass by, De La Cruz can no longer manage simple tasks she once took for granted. For example, standing in the kitchen to cook meals for her family is now a struggle. Chemotherapy has taken a serious toll on her body, and she often has negative reactions to the treatment and feels the side effects almost immediately. 'You lose all sense of humility or embarrassment because there are days when you can't even wash yourself and need assistance,' she explains. 'The debilitating pain from the neuropathy makes it impossible to even stand up at times. The bone and muscle pain from the injections made me need to use a walker at 42 years old because I couldn't even stand up on my own.' Working to cover basic expenses is also difficult, but even more heartbreaking is not being able to take care of her younger children when they're sick. She also has to miss her kids' activities because her weak immune system makes even a minor illness potentially life-threatening. 'You just feel helpless and useless and a burden all at the same time,' she candidly tells PEOPLE. While her children's schools were informed early on about her illness and have offered unwavering support, receiving a call from the elementary school nurse left her in tears. "It's one of those calls no parent wants to receive,' De La Cruz says. 'The feeling is gut-wrenching. It's almost like someone knocked the wind out of you, and you really don't know how to react to it. All I could do was cry.' When her son got home from school, she made sure they talked and decided that therapy was the best route for him. 'I allow my son to ask all of the questions he wants to ask, and I answer them honestly. I don't believe in tiptoeing around something or masking what the situation really is,' she reveals. 'We've had open discussions about my chances of survival as well as how it's going to change our lives on a daily basis.' Yet, no matter how sensitively she approaches the topic, De La Cruz still senses that her children worry about losing her. 'It doesn't take away the fear and a child's eyes as they watch the person who's always been the strongest in the household become the weakest,' she admits. De La Cruz has told each of her children that if they ever felt the need to talk to a professional, she would gladly arrange it. When it comes to creating small moments of normalcy around the house, De La Cruz says sticking to a routine helps a lot. 'No matter how sick I am, every Sunday our family has a Sunday dinner,' she reveals. 'Usually, I'm the one to do all the cooking, but we've had to improvise.' She's had to rely on her children more than ever, especially in the kitchen, as she can no longer stand for more than a few minutes at a time. Nevertheless, cooking together brings them joy. What she's learned through cancer is this: be honest with your children. Let them feel what they feel— anger, sadness, confusion. 'Everyone grieves differently,' she says, 'and this is a grieving process. You won't be the person you were before cancer.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. One of the hardest but most important lessons was learning to accept help. As someone deeply independent, leaning on others felt unnatural at first. But she came to understand that "it doesn't mean you're weak… It just means you're human – and even the strongest humans need help.' She wants others to know that the financial toll is real and often hidden. 'A lot of people fail to understand that just because you physically survive cancer, it doesn't mean that you emotionally mentally or financially survive it,' she emphasizes. 'I had to create a GoFundMe to attempt to not lose our home due to the unbelievable cost of trying to survive.' Her advice to others facing this journey is to speak openly, accept support, and don't be ashamed to ask for help. Survival isn't just about your body – it's about your whole life. And healing takes time. Read the original article on People

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