Family recalls courage of teen cancer victim

THE BALTIMORE SUN

Sandra Keeney can't stop talking about her daughter Michele's determination and spirit.

Reliant on crutches since the discovery of a spinal tumor at 17 months, Michele still learned to ride a bicycle, drive a car and roller skate.

"She would put on the roller skates and pull herself along with her crutches," Mrs. Keeney recalled with a smile. "She always wanted to be like everybody else. There was no stopping her in anything she wanted to do."

Michele, 16, died of cancer Oct. 2 in her family's Ellicott City home. She was a junior at Howard High School.

She left behind not just memories but also a mother who now wants to help other parents in the midst of similar situations.

"There are so many things available to families that you don't really know about or think about using," Mrs. Keeney said.

"When you find out your child has cancer or some other illness, you're in such a state of shock that you don't really know what's going on around you. Until you talk to other parents and get a chance to understand what's available, you just don't think about it."

Opening the family's Disney World photo album, Mrs. Keeney flipped through the pictures and remembered the fun Michele had at the Orlando, Fla., theme park.

"It was the greatest fantasy that any kid could experience," Mrs. Keeney said. "It was wonderful not just for Michele, but for all of us to have the time together."

It was only through the generosity of the national Make-A-Wish Foundation and the state Grant-A-Wish Foundation that the entire family was able to travel to Disney World twice, during Michele's last, four-year battle with cancer.

Doctors had hoped that Michele was forever cured of cancer when a spinal tumor was removed at age 2. She was weakened but, after years of therapy, managed to walk with the use of crutches.

However, the radiation treatment used to kill the spinal tumor apparently caused a different type of cancer, discovered in 1990 in the form of a cantaloupe-sized tumor attached to her diaphragm.

Copyright © 2021, The Baltimore Sun, a Baltimore Sun Media Group publication | Place an Ad
73°