Tatiana Schlossberg reveals terminal cancer diagnosis

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Tatiana Schlossberg posted a very poignant and wonderful essay.
The 35-year-old daughter of Caroline Kennedy and Edwin Schledberg – and cousin of Robert K. Kennedy – shared on Saturday that she had been diagnosed with Aceloid Leukemia, a rare blood cancer – and the doctors gave him a fatal prognosis.
Writing in the New Yorker on November 22, Schlossberg explained that he learned in his second hours after giving birth to his second child with man George Moran in May 2024, that his white blood count is high.
After being told of his diagnosis, the environmental reporter – and associate at Edwin Jr. About Moran – he was told he would need months of chemotherapy, he admitted in his story he had trouble processing the news.
He wrote: “I couldn’t believe they were talking about me,” I wrote about myself.
He went on to say:
“I had a son that I loved more than anything and he was just born and I needed to take care of him. This may not be my life.”
Tatiana Schlossberg attends Intellivencer Live: Our Warm Future presented by New York Magazine at Brookfield Place on September 05, 2019 in New York City. (Photo by Craig Barritt / New York Magazine Images)Elsewhere in the segment, Schlossberg says his health secretary cousin has become “an embarrassment to me and my entire immediate family,” largely because of his dangerous views on vaccination.
In January, Schlossberg began a trial of Car-T-Cell Therapy, an immunotherapy aimed at fighting certain blood cancers. After several rounds of trial, his doctor told him he might have one year to live.
She said her husband has done everything anyone could ask, to continue with his loved ones and his condition:
“My parents and my brother and sister, too, have been raising my children and staying at my various mansions in the hospital almost every day for the past year and a half.
“They held my hand for a long time while I suffered, I try not to show their pain and sorrow to protect me from it. This was a good gift, even though I feel great pain every day.”
Tatiana Schlossberg, granddaughter of former US President John F Kennedy speaks during a memorial service in Runnymede, Surry on November 22, 2013, to mark the 50th anniversary of his assassination. (AFP Photo / Ben Stansall)On another point, Schlossberg explained his feelings himself.
“All my life, I’ve tried to be good, to be a good student and a good sister and a good daughter, and to protect my mother and I’ve made her angry,” she said.
“Now I have added a new tragedy to his life, to the life of our family, and there is nothing I can do to stop it.”


