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OK This Breaks My Heart


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  • 2 years later...

A little British boy fought terminal cancer long enough to meet and name his newborn baby sister and told his devastated parents: “You can only cry for 20 minutes.”

 

Nine-year-old Bailey Cooper battled the disease for 15 months and was determined to hold his new sibling who was due.

 

Mom Rachel, 28, had her in November and Bailey named her Millie — and the day before he died, Bailey was pictured cradling the baby in his arms.

 

Tragically, Bailey died on Christmas Eve — and his proud mom and dad, Lee, 30, said he smiled all the way through his treatment.

 

Rachel said: “We didn’t think he would last that long, but he was determined to meet Millie. It got to the end of November and Millie was born. He hugged her and did everything an older brother would do — change her, wash her, sing to her.”

 

Lee added: “Doctors said he was going to go before Millie was born. He didn’t. He fought and on the way to hospital, he said, ‘We should call her Millie.’”

 

“But the moment after he met her, he began to taper off quickly. He was slipping away.”

 

The family knew Bailey was unlikely to survive to celebrate Christmas but encouraged him to write a list of gifts he would like.

 

But his parents noticed they seemed to be chosen with his younger brother, 6-year-old Riley, in mind.

 

Knowing he was dying, Bailey had planned his own funeral and asked that all guests be dressed in superhero outfits.

 

He told his parents in their last family meeting: “You’re only allowed to cry for 20 minutes. You have to take care of Riley and Millie.”

 

And when his grandmother said she wished she could take his place, Bailey told her: “That is really selfish, Nan. You have grandchildren to take care of.”

 

After being taken to a hospice on Dec. 22, Bailey’s family gathered by his bedside and read him stories to keep him company.

 

Rachel said: “He knew he was not going to be here for Christmas, but we tried to get him to put together a Christmas list. He said he didn’t want to, but we encouraged him to.”

 

“By 11:45 a.m. on Christmas Eve, we were by his bedside. We knew it was not going to be long. We told him, ‘It’s time to go, Bailey. Stop.’”

 

“The moment we said ‘stop,’ he took his last breath and had just the one tear come out of his eye. It was peaceful.”

 

Lee added: “We were going to get everything he asked for. But most of the stuff he asked for were things he never played with.”

 

“They were more suited for his little brother. He had picked everything for Riley because he knew he was not going to play with them.”

 

Bailey first became ill in the summer of 2016 and after a series of tests in September, he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, which develops in the network of vessels and glands in the body.

 

By the time it was discovered, it was already in Stage Three.

 

Doctors treated the cancer with chemotherapy and steroid medication but were optimistic that Bailey would recover, and in February 2017, he went into remission.

 

Bailey returned to Stoke Lodge Primary School in Patchway, Bristol, about 120 miles west of London, and was subject to regular check-ups and routine MRIs every three months.

 

But when the family went on Easter vacation to a Devon holiday park, they were dealt a devastating blow.

 

Lee said: “On the second day, we were in Paignton Zoo when we had a phone call from the hospital that he had relapsed and they needed him back in. Bailey showed signs that he was breathless and tired.”

 

The family was told there was a 70 percent survival rate and chemotherapy began again.

 

“The doctors threw the book at it and told us even if he survived it, the long-term effects will last for the rest of his life,” Lee said.

 

“He had a stem cell transplant. We had to try everything we could.”

 

In July, the family was told that Bailey was in remission, but by August the cancer had come back — and they were told there was nothing more that could be done.

 

The cancer had spread quickly and lumps were found in Bailey’s chest, lungs, liver and stomach.

 

Hundreds of people turned out to pay their respects to Bailey on Jan. 6, including Bristol Rovers FC captain Tom Lockyer, who struck up a friendship with the young football fan.

 

Lee said: “Bailey smiled through it all. He pulled funny faces and made people laugh, even though he was in so much pain.”

 

 

 

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