INDIANAPOLIS – Photographs mark a moment in time. For the Dilger family, the moment comes as their youngest, Kiara, faces a cancer diagnosis. The three-year-old and her mom came to Peyton Manning Children’s Hospital from just outside of Evansville – a three-hour drive.
“We just found out – I got her diagnosis yesterday, that she has B-Cell ALL [Acute lymphoblastic Leukemia]. I think that's what it's called,” Janet Dilger, Kiara’s mom, said. She continued, “[It’s] Leukemia. She has leukemia. She will start her treatment tomorrow.”
On Wednesday in the middle of appointments, the two came down to the Center for Cancer and Blood Diseases. It’s where professional photographer, Mark Watson, set up his studio Wednesday.
“Here in Indianapolis, we have photographed hundreds, hundreds of families,” Watson said.
These photos are a start to a new journey for the Dilger family.
“This is an opportunity [that’s] kind of fun with her and I thought it'd be neat to mark a milestone in our journey,” Dilger said.
The nonprofit called “Flashes of Hope”marks a moment in time during a child’s cancer diagnosis through photographs. Nationally, the organization has done nearly 90,000.
“We wish we didn't have to do it at all. We wished children didn't have cancer. But the fact is they do, so we want to just keep coming back over and over and over,” Watson said.
Before sitting down for photos, the families participating at Peyton Manning Children’s Hospital are pampered with hair and makeup. Once the session is wrapped up, all of the photos are given to them for free. For patients who are isolated to their rooms, the team gowns up and heads to them.
“Our goal, honestly, is to keep photographing until every child is cured,” Watson said.
It is a flash of hope — of strength — of love — of beauty. A time to celebrate the bravery through a cancer journey the Dilgers and so many others have walked.
“We have been really, really blessed. Right now, I just thought know we know God has everything set up for us,” Dilger said.
-
GM recalls pickups, SUVs because rear wheels can lock up, increasing crash risk
General Motors is recalling nearly 462,000 pickup trucks and big SUVs with diesel engines because the rear wheels can lock up, increasing the risk of a crash.1984: What’s in that briefcase? Barbara Boyd finds out
Working men walking the streets of downtown Indianapolis were frequently seen clutching briefcases of all kinds in 1984. WRTV's Barbara Boyd set out to find what they were carrying.Jack Smith asks court to pause appeal of Trump's classified documents case
Special counsel Jack Smith asked a court Wednesday to pause prosecutors' appeal seeking to revive the classified documents case against President-elect Donald Trump.Housing development for Indy's unhoused officially ready for move-in
Compass on Washington is a 36-unit permanent supportive housing development that will also offer services for mental health, addiction, and recovery.