Rebuilt

 The day had finally arrived, the first day of my Bone Marrow Transplant.


On the way to the hospital, I had my earphones plugged in, listening to the one song that has carried me through every dark moment, “One” by Metallica. It was my uncle, someone I’m really close to, who had first recommended it to me, and over time it became more than just a song. It became my shield, my companion whenever life felt too heavy.

This time, though, things were different. My mother was going to be my partner for the next 30 days of isolation, my constant strength, my silent warrior. Just knowing she was by my side gave me a kind of comfort I can’t fully explain.

But as soon as I reached, a surprise was waiting. For the transplant, they had to insert another tube, this time through my neck, to harvest stem cells. Even thinking about it was enough to terrify me. My heart was pounding, my hands had gone cold. And then I heard the doctor calmly say, “Bring the scalpel.” That word just stayed with me; it felt sharp even before anything had begun. My heartbeat got so loud that even the doctor noticed. But somehow, with their reassuring words and my mother right there beside me, I made it through. The tube was in place, and tomorrow, they said, would be stem cell collection day.

The harvesting began early. I had to lie flat for nearly six hours without moving while the machine carefully drew out my stem cells. My back was in constant pain, but I couldn’t shift, not even an inch, until it was all over. When it finally ended, I was taken to my new home for the next 30 days, a small isolation room filled with medical equipment that hummed and blinked like silent guards. That little room was going to see everything, my lowest moments and also my quiet victories.

The next day, chemo began. This was no ordinary chemo; it was the strongest dosage they could give, meant to crush my immune system to nothing. I still remember one particular drug very clearly. The doctors told me to eat ice cubes while it was being infused. At first, I didn’t understand why, until they explained that the drug was so harsh it could cause blisters all along my oesophagus. That thought scared me more than the cold ever could.

And so, I ate ice. Cube after cube, bowl after bowl. My mother stood right beside me, almost insisting that the nurses keep bringing more bowls filled to the brim. She didn’t want to take even the smallest chance when it came to my pain. By the end, I had eaten so much ice that even the doctors laughed, saying I was the first patient they had ever seen who managed to avoid blisters completely. In that strange, frozen moment, it felt like a small win, something I could hold on to; I felt like I had created a small piece of history.

But every win came with a battle. After the chemo, my white blood cell count dropped to 50. For a healthy human, it’s usually up to 10,000. My immune system was gone, completely wiped out. I was left exposed and vulnerable to even the tiniest infection. That’s when they began giving me back my stem cells, the seeds of new life that would, hopefully, help my body begin producing white blood cells again. It felt strange, almost unreal, like something inside me was being started from scratch.

There was a day, I remember, when I was so bored and in a complete trance, just lying there and thinking about whether everything happening was even real. I randomly started counting the lights on the ceiling. Then I started touching and feeling things around me, just to make sure it wasn’t a dream. My mother was watching all of this. She got extremely concerned and, for a moment, thought her son was going mad. She says that to this day, that was the most heartbreaking time of her life, seeing me in that state. Watching me go through all of it, the pain, the helplessness, even something like forcing myself through bowls of ice, lying there unable to do anything. For a mother, experiencing all of this felt like a terrible dream. But she stayed strong for me, giving me hope and keeping me sane.

In between these struggles, there were still moments I hold close to my heart. Strange as it sounds, even in that sterile room, with all the pain, fear, and uncertainty, there were small moments worth cherishing, the sound of my mother’s laughter, a nurse’s gentle kindness, or simply the feeling of getting through another day.

“Rebuilt” felt like the only word that could capture this. In that small room, I was broken down in ways I never imagined, mentally and physically, but at the same time, I was held, supported, and slowly rebuilt, cell by cell, day by day.

It wasn’t sudden, and it wasn’t easy. It was quiet, almost invisible at times. But somewhere in the middle of all the pain and fear, something inside me had begun to change. Something had started to come back to life. And while those days tested me in ways I can never fully explain, they also began to show me something else, something I hadn’t noticed at first.

And so the journey went on.

 

Comments

  1. I’m beyond proud of you. What you went through and the way you’ve shared it, just unreal strength!🫶🏼✨🧿

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is really incredible, unimaginable strength of mind & will power to overcome what seems like a toughest situation life can present. Kudos to you braveheart and also to your Mom who stood Rock solid beside you..

    ReplyDelete
  3. Sonali Deshmukh8 April 2026 at 21:59

    Shreesh & parents you guys are real Rockstars. This is beyond incredible. Shreesh stay blessed beta!

    ReplyDelete
  4. God bless you with all the happiness in this world.Dar ke aage jeet hai.

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