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My Son’s Brain Tumor Was Benign. We Thought We Were In The Clear — But We Were Wrong.

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The author's son consulting with his doctor, Eugene Hwang, associate chief of oncology at Children's National Hospital in Washington, during treatment in 2020.
The author’s son consulting with his doctor, Eugene Hwang, associate chief of oncology at Children’s National Hospital in Washington, during treatment in 2020.
Courtesy of Adina Ciment

I saw the mass on my son’s brain from the small booth in the CT room. It didn’t take much to realize that the golf-ball-sized circle on one side of the image was not a good sign. We had arrived at the hospital emergency room with my unresponsive son, age 8, in the midst of a silent seizure, and even before it officially came out of the doctor’s mouth, I knew he had a brain tumor.

That would be the first of many diagnoses as we battled a tumor that was supposed to be “the good kind.” From my ignorant world of strep throat and stitches, I knew that “benign” was the word one always wanted to hear when talking about cancer and tumors. It was the blessing that came after the scare, uttered amid sighs and sobs of relief, diagnosing patients with the best-case scenario.

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