I smiled for them… even when my body was breaking inside.
Because a mother should never let her children see her fear.
My name is Anna. This photo was taken on a quiet morning in the hospital. The machines around me make soft sounds, like they are counting every second of my life. I wear this scarf not because I like it… but because my hair is gone now.
The doctors say I have leukemia.
When I first heard it, I didn’t cry. I only thought about my family. My husband who still pretends to be strong. My daughter who sends me messages every night saying, “Mom, come home soon.” And my little son… who still believes I am the strongest person in the world.
So I wrote this sign.
“I have faith that I will be cured.”
Not because I am not scared… but because they need to believe it too.
I was not always like this.
Before all of this, my life was simple and warm. Every morning, I woke up early to cook breakfast. I packed lunch boxes, tied my son’s shoes, and reminded my daughter not to forget her homework. My husband would kiss my forehead before leaving for work, and I would stand at the door, waving goodbye like I always did.
Those small moments… they were everything.
I remember the first time I felt something was wrong. I was tired all the time. My body felt heavy, like I was carrying something I could not see. Then the bruises came… small at first, then more. I told myself it was nothing. Mothers don’t have time to be sick. We keep going.
But one day, I couldn’t stand up from the bed.
That was the day everything changed.
The hospital became my new home. White walls. Cold air. Strange smells. Needles. Tests. Words I didn’t understand. And then… the word that broke everything.
Leukemia.
My husband held my hand when the doctor said it. His hand was shaking, but he tried to hide it. I looked at him and smiled… because if I didn’t, he would break.
At night, when everyone leaves, that’s when the fear comes.
It sits next to me in the dark.
It whispers, “What if you don’t make it?”
It asks, “What will happen to your children?”
Sometimes, I hold my chest like this… just to feel that my heart is still beating. Still fighting.
The treatment is hard. Some days I feel strong. Some days I feel like I am fading away. My body is not the same anymore. I see myself in the mirror, and sometimes… I don’t recognize who I am.
But then my phone lights up.
A message from my daughter: “Mom, I love you.”
A voice note from my son: “Mom, I’m waiting for you.”
And suddenly… I remember why I must keep going.
Every time they visit, I sit up straight. I smile. I tell them stories. I laugh, even when it hurts. I don’t want their memories of me to be filled with pain. I want them to remember my voice, my smile… my love.
Because that is what a mother does.
She protects.
Even when she is the one who needs saving.
Today felt different.
The doctor walked into the room, and I could see it in his eyes. Something was not the same. He sat down beside me and said softly, “Anna… we need to talk.”
My hands started shaking.
Because deep inside… I knew this moment would come.
He explained things slowly, carefully. Words like “response,” “treatment,” “next step.” I tried to listen, but my heart was too loud. It felt like time stopped, like everything around me disappeared.
I only understood one thing.
This fight… is not over yet.
There is still hope.
But the road is longer than I thought.
After he left, I sat there in silence. I looked at my hands. Weak… but still here. I closed my eyes and took a deep breath.
I am still here.
And as long as I am here… I will fight.
Not just for me.
But for the little hands that still reach for mine.
For the voices that still call me “Mom.”
So I hold on.
Even when it hurts.
Even when I’m scared.
Even when the night feels endless.
Because somewhere… beyond this pain…
there is a door that leads back home.
And I am not ready to say goodbye.
Not yet.