 I would start coming out of the chemo probably like maybe Friday night in the Saturday, but then the cycle starts all over again. I mean I estimate that my care has probably cost over $100,000 by this point and that includes medication, doctor visits, the chemo therapy, surgery, CAT scans, colonoscopies. It happened around one o'clock in the afternoon I believe. I got a call from my gastrologist and he said, well, you know, I have some bad news here. He said, well, you know, the test came back to show it's malignant. It's cancer. He said to me, do you know what to do next? I said, no, I really don't. For nine years I had no health insurance. I had access to healthcare through free clinics and I was thankful for that. But you know, when you receive a cancer diagnosis, I'm not sure if the free clinics will have the resources to really treat you for that. In March of 2015, I had qualified for health insurance when Governor Tom Wolf accepted the expanded Medicaid funding under the Affordable Care Act. You know, in my situation I was very dire having a cancer diagnosis, but you can simply be driving down the street and getting into a car accident. If you didn't have health insurance, you could be in a lot of trouble financially. Even though I'm done with chemo, I'm still under five years of surveillance from my oncology doctors, which means more doctor visits, more colonoscopies, more CAT scans, more blood work. I can't afford to pay for that out of pocket. I simply can't. You have a group of legislators who want to rip away healthcare from 30 million Americans. As long as I'm still here, as long as I'm still alive, I'm going to continue to fight this. People's lives are depending upon the Affordable Care Act.