Presently 21, the New York local lets Individuals know that despite the fact that she’s constantly had a daily existence reason, that reason has become more significant since defeating a “overwhelming” fight with bone disease. In October 2019, Skrubis got up one morning with a great deal of torment in her left knee.

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As a 18-year-old rookie and dance major at the College of Bison, she was worried about the conceivable injury. However, after an excursion to an earnest consideration found no reason, she pushed through the agony and completed the semester. It was only after Christmas break that year, when her aggravation proceeded, that Skrubis chose to visit a muscular specialist.

She felt a “warm bump” on her knee that she accepted for the time being that was a blood coagulation or bursitis.

Nonetheless, a x-beam uncovered the bump was really a growth, and in January 2020, Skrubis was determined to have a typical bone disease called osteosarcoma.

Osteosarcoma normally influences youngsters and starts in regions where the bone develops rapidly, like the finish of the leg, as per the American Disease Society.

“At the point when I was 13, my father died startlingly and I sort of needed to find a sense of peace with that and sort out some way to adapt,” Skrubis tells Individuals.

“Also, not to say that it set me up, but rather it was somewhat the very bargain that this malignant growth was something annihilating and absolutely surprising and I just needed to go in full power and take it from that point.” Therapy for osteosarcoma might incorporate chemotherapy, radiation, medical procedure, or, for Skrubis’ situation, a removal.

She started with chemotherapy not long after her determination and was then given the choice to either have an appendage rescue a medical procedure to eliminate the cancer or go through a removal. “Chemo negatively affected my body and, obviously, having a removal is very groundbreaking. Yet, I simply needed to get rid of the cancer.

I would have rather not done any greater treatment,” she makes sense of. “I realize that many children who had appendage rescue medical procedures, which is where they attempt to keep as much bone as possible, that they backslide. So I recently said, ‘Take it, ensure you get clear edges, I simply need to be finished with this.’”

Skrubis had her left leg severed over the knee in April 2020 and was considered disease free.

She completed treatment — altogether, nine months of chemotherapy and eight months of immunotherapy — and was fitted for a prosthetic by the next September. During her visit in the medical clinic, Skrubis says her mom, Lisa, 54, found and associated with MIB Specialists, a pediatric osteosarcoma charity that gives assets, data and backing to patients and families.

In addition to the fact that she was ready to get support from the association during her own fight, however Skrubis — who is presently the Lesser Warning Board President for MIB Specialists — understood another energy in supporting different children with osteosarcoma as a promoter for patients and further examination.

“While I was sitting in the clinic getting chemo siphoned into my veins, I had the option to improve for youngsters who were simply getting analyzed or who didn’t have the foggiest idea what was befalling them,” she says. “MIB Specialists has truly given me a space to share my voice,” the artist adds. “What’s more, presently I’m examining to fill in as a kid life expert with the goal that I can affect various lives in the emergency clinic. Give them trust that there can be great results and ideally push for better exploration later on.”

— Sherrick Murdoff (@smurdoff) November 18, 2022

In any case, Skrubis was additionally set on truly showing others such as herself that keeping their fantasies after an amputation is conceivable.

Skrubis sees her removal as a positive result and concedes that it shockingly pushed her to get back to being “so in line with her body.”

“I never abandoned accepting that I would have the option to move once more,” she makes sense of. “Growing up, I was very tall and didn’t get a positive reaction from kids at school.

So expressive dance was my method for recovering that and a space where I can cause my body to feel delightful regardless of what anybody said.”

“After my removal, it’s sort of the same way. I don’t look equivalent to other 21-year-olds my age, however I can in any case make my body look wonderful, I can in any case do the things that different children do,” Skrubis tells Individuals. “Artful dance is somewhat my approach to embracing my handicap, showing that I won’t hesitate to do anything that I need.”

“I trust my story can show different kids and youthful grown-ups that their fantasies don’t need to end in light of a staggering determination like osteosarcoma.”