For ten years, Cheryl carried a secret she tried to laugh off—a small lump on her foot that slowly grew into something she couldn’t ignore. At fifteen, doctors thought it was a minor injury, maybe a torn ligament. Life went on, and so did the pain. By the time she met David in Glasgow, the lump was the size of a golf ball. She hid it under trainers, brushed off questions, and joked her way around it—until one evening, when David noticed and gently asked, “What’s going on with your foot?” That question changed everything.
Tests revealed the truth: an aggressive sarcoma. The only way to stop it from spreading was to amputate her lower leg. The diagnosis shattered her world—but David stayed. Weeks before her surgery, he proposed. “He gave me the will to keep going,” Cheryl said. In a moment where everything felt uncertain, love became her anchor. She said yes—to both him and the operation that would save her life.
Sarcomas are rare and deceptive, often beginning as small, painless lumps in soft tissue or bone. Cheryl’s had been growing silently for a decade. Now she shares her story to warn others that what seems harmless might not be. “If I hadn’t shown him, I might’ve ignored it even longer,” she admits.
Her message is clear and urgent: trust your instincts. Pain and changes in your body are signals, not inconveniences. Don’t wait, don’t minimize, and don’t dismiss what feels wrong. And if someone you love is quietly suffering—be like David. Notice. Care. Speak up. You might not just comfort them. You might save their life.