Categories: Slice of Rye

Michele Santos Finds That Ray of Hope

Storied Lives

Michele Santos Finds That Ray of Hope

By Denise Woodin

Twice a month, Michele Santos takes the elevator to the seventh floor of Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla. There, she puts on her brightest smile —not a stretch for someone who has always been upbeat — and warmly greets the leukemia and lymphoma patients who are undergoing treatment. Some days, she leaves inspired. And some days she goes home and cries. Some days, her volunteer work hits a little too close to home.

In March 2014, Michele was diagnosed with Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) and underwent a bone marrow transplant at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. In the years that followed, one sister and then a second, succumbed to different types of leukemia. It was, Michele said, “a very dark time in my life.” During a recent conversation, Michele recalled how, at the Rye YMCA, she found a ray of light in the midst of her most difficult challenges.

Born in New Jersey, Michele married at age 23 and followed her husband Manuel to Mt. Vernon, N.Y. The couple raised two children, now 23 and 18. Michele worked in the medical field, scheduling appointments and handling front desk duties, and remained physically active. “I was a multi-tasker,” she said. “I used to exercise by walking and doing videos at home.” When she was diagnosed with leukemia, her work and her exercising came to a halt. “I had to be very careful around the public because my immune system was compromised,” she explained.

Nine months after her bone marrow transplant, Michele was purchasing a wig in a shop on Central Avenue when “a wonderful lady” handed her a card for “Mondays with SOUL RYEDERS”, a monthly day of complimentary services for cancer patients at the Beauty Bar and Salon in Port Chester. From there, she learned about LIVESTRONG at the YMCA, a free 12-week small group program that helps cancer survivors regain their strength.

When she started LIVESTRONG at the YMCA in February 2015, Michele was suffering from a mild case of neuropathy from the medications and chemotherapy and had put on unwanted weight. She also had “a lot of leg and knee issues” and was having trouble with balance.

“My coaches were so supportive and motivating,” Michele recalled. “When somebody encourages you so much, even when you don’t feel like being physically active, it feels good, it really does.”

She continued, “All my life I’ve been a happy person. But that was a very hard time. I found life again when I came to the Y. I associated myself with wonderful people; it became my second home. By coming here, I had a schedule, got physically fit and mentally in a good space, and I met other patients and survivors. I don’t think I would have recovered as well if I hadn’t discovered this wonderful program.”

Even though she’s back at work — first as a recreation aide in the Ardsley School District and now as a legal assistant for a law firm — and has to travel from the other side of the county, Michele tries to work out at the Rye Y three or four times a week. “I love Zumba”, she reports. “I’ve done kickboxing, yoga classes. And I like the swimming.”

Reflecting on her volunteer work with the American Cancer Society, she said, “It’s very important to me because every day that I wake up, I feel I’ve been blessed with a second chance at life. A lot of people don’t have that second chance. I need to do this. I’m very passionate about it.”

She added, “I am human, and you just know that every time you go there you’re going to meet somebody new, with a new story. And you may make them feel a little bit better because you understand. Then there are the ones who are in such a sad state they can’t hear you. But that’s not going to stop me. This is my path now and I love it.”

<The author is Director of Community Impact and Social Responsibility of the Rye YMCA.>

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