 I wish you a party with her. I know. She's going to post it on Snapchat. I don't really want to cry. I don't really want to cry. Yamali is... Upgoing, very happy. She likes to be up to work. She's very happy. She loves to cares about others. She always thinks about others than herself. She will help me to clean the house. She will help me to cook. She's always like that. And until now, she was diagnosed with brain cancer. The day she was diagnosed, it was like a... everything turned dark. Then you find out that it's cancer. And the first thing that comes to your mind is death. Yamali was diagnosed with medioblastoma, which is one of the most common forms of pediatric brain tumors. It's also one of the most curable forms of pediatric brain tumors. So we can be very optimistic that Yamali is going to have a good outcome. Even though we know at the end the outcome is very positive and we're very optimistic that she's going to do well, it's a very long, difficult journey to get from diagnosis to ultimately cure. When they told me that Yamali had the tumor, she was going to have the surgery, I said, okay, there is nothing more important than my kids. So far it's been a rough journey you could do. They told us it's going to be a long journey and we didn't actually think it was going to be this rough. We've been together as a family, but it's just I have to quit my job. It's been more than a year. We, as a family, got together closer, but at the same time my other two kids I felt that I neglected because I had to stay where I'm at and I stayed in the hospital for three months with her. I never went back home. Our social worker Diane Jill she's been very helpful not only on the economic part that the aid that they actually provided us, but she talked to us. As a friend you could say she talked to me and it helped you to open up. I try to support a family and any which way that we can, whether it's emotional support whether it's being present at all the meetings the social worker team we're like the one person that's constant we're always there, we try to get to know the families to figure out what's going to help them out better whether it's how to talk to your older kids about what's going on, how to assess what's going on, how to reach out to resources just how to learn to manage their daily life struggles as best as possible. The Gillian Fund has been a huge help for us we're really grateful for that. To have foundations like the Gillian Fund which are able to provide support to families help pay rent, deal with utility bills other aspects of day-to-day life that we all take for granted it's really important that we have the support and foundations that get behind these families and help them through every phase of treatment. The Gillian Fund has also been able to fund one of our positions where we actually have a social worker part-time thanks to the Gillian Fund because they saw that what we do in a growing department is something that was really needed. Social work is there for the families they're providing that support, emotional support and they're a huge rock for our families in a critical part of the team and so being able to have funding and support for social work has a tremendous impact on our families and we're so grateful for the Gillian Fund that they're able to provide that for our families. Not just a doctor or a nurse or someone who's just entertaining our daughter it's you become attached and it feels it's a good feeling.