 My name is David Questonberry, and I play offensive line. Cancer has affected my life pretty dramatically. When I was 23 and 2014, I was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins T-cell lymphoplasic lymphoma. I went through a pretty intensive regimen of chemotherapy. It lasted about three years. And it was a fight. It was a tough fight. It was a long fight. It stole years of my life, lots of long, sleepless nights. And it's been a battle just to get back to where I'm at today. I felt like something wasn't right. Mine was a little different because I had a very aggressive form, so it kind of happened fast. But I probably knew for about a week, a week and a half before I got diagnosed that something really didn't feel right with me. And so that's why I tell really anyone, like, hey, if something doesn't feel right or something is bothering you and not getting better, like, go get it checked. Because if I wasn't in the position I was at in Houston, you know, with the Texans and being surrounded by, you know, fantastic medical doctors, you know, even if I just waited another week or two, my story could be completely different. You know, I had a dream of gold to be a starter in this league and play good football and play a lot of football. You know, I really didn't want to let cancer take that from me. And it has definitely not been an easy journey. It hasn't been a quick journey. It's been a long, kind of brutal road. And just getting back to playing at this level and playing with these guys out here, you know, it's taken me years to really get there. But I never gave up the belief that I couldn't get to where I'm at. You know, it was just kind of an everyday climbing that mountain, an everyday fight, even after the chemo was done, even after I was in remission. The fight wasn't over because there was still a level that I wanted to get back to. And that's what really I was working for, and that's what I'm still working for. My advice for anybody fighting the fight, going through it, is fight it your way. Like, this disease and the regimen you go through, it takes so much from you. It takes your hair, it takes your well-being, it takes sleepless nights, it takes your nights away, it takes years or months or anything out of your life. But don't give it more than it takes. Don't give it your hope for a better days. Don't give it your outlook to still try to see the beautiful things around you or miracles that happen all around you. It is tough what you're going through, but don't give it anything more than it already takes from us.