- Footballer Charlie Watson says he will win his fight with skin cancer
- Watson, who plays for Threave Rovers, had weeks to live
- Listen now: everything is launched! The signs that the side of the united man of Ruben Amorim can come there
Adolescent footballer Charlie Watson swore that he would continue to fight after receiving a diagnosis of skin cancer.
Watson, who plays for Threave Rovers in Scotland and was previously at Queen of the South, was informed that he had weeks to live.
Watson, 19, wrote on social networks: “The last few weeks have been very difficult, but things are in UP now. Four weeks ago, I was told that cancer spread quickly and that I spread to my hip and my spine. I was told that I only had weeks left to live.
“Hearing that it was just devastating, but I knew that I was not going to let him win. I started different treatments and I have a nutritionist who helps me with strict diet.
“I could not have done this without the gifts and the support of each gave me so far, so thank you from the bottom of my heart.
Watson paid tribute to his mother and said that he would “win this fight”.
Adolescent footballer Charlie Watson swore that he would continue to fight after receiving a diagnosis of skin cancer
He wrote: “Most importantly, my incredible mom who was kept at each stage, I saw her heart break in a way that I did not know possible, I love you mom.”
“I will win this fight”.
As the Daily Record reported, Charlie Amanda’s mother said: “I don’t want to attribute Charlie cancer to the use of lounge chairs and sun exposure, but there is an awareness to be taken up on this subject. The taupe appeared after his return from vacation and frequently used layers of diapers at the time.
“There is no money in the world that a mother would not try to raise, to try to find a remedy for her child.
“If I could exchange places with him, I would do it in the blink of an eye. As a parent, I never felt so helpless in my life.
Watson was diagnosed with nodular clever melanoma after a taupe appeared on his abdomen last summer. He noticed it after his return from vacation to Magaluf.
The taupe fell from her skin and was removed from his body, but the results showed that he had a shape of skin cancer.
A campaign in Scotland has made it possible to collect more than £ 60,000 which will be devoted to the search for clinical trials.
His mother said Watson often used bleeding abroad and did not always use sunscreen.