Danny Cocke - Portrait of an AYA Cancer Survivor
Oddly, Cocke says he wouldn’t trade his cancer experience for anything. He says it was a gift that taught him not to take life for granted and to love while there still is time.
At age 22, Danny Cocke was reveling in the newfound independence of young adulthood when cancer sent him back home into the fold of his family, and into an awkward period of dependence.
"For a young adult, it’s just a weird time to be a human being," says Cocke, who adds that moving in with his parents during his cancer treatments was "like a giant summer vacation."
Just prior to his diagnosis of testicular cancer, Cocke had hit a groove in his music career. In fact, it was during a band rehearsal that searing back pain sent him to the emergency room. Within a matter of hours, the attending physician there told him he had what appeared to be cancerous tumors throughout his body. For the next year, Cocke’s world shifted out of the recording studio and into hospitals as he underwent chemotherapy and other cancer treatments. Now 29, he appears to be cancer free.
Oddly, Cocke says he wouldn’t trade his cancer experience for anything. He says it was a gift that taught him not to take life for granted and to love while there still is time.
"It gave me peace with life," he says.
Cocke’s independence came back in time, and he again is playing with a band and composing music for movie trailers. He also works with other cancer patients, using his personal triumphs to pass along hope.