I lay inside the machine, surrounded by loud beeping, thumping, and whooshing noises. A padded coil around my face held my head in position. An overwhelming sense of fear rushed through my body. I knew something was wrong. I was 15 years old, and I was having a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) test to check my brain for tumors.
For several months, I’d been suffering migraine headaches that were so severe all I could do was sleep. I’d also been having periods of intense fatigue. At first, I wasn’t overly concerned about my symptoms, because my family has a history of migraines. But eventually my mother took me to see a neurologist, which is a doctor who specializes in the brain. The neurologist suggested the MRI.
The morning after the MRI, I found my mom locked in the bathroom. When I asked her to let me in, she refused. Her voice trembled, and it sounded like she was holding back her tears. I could only hear whispers and mumbles until I finally made out the words “brain tumor.”