The Two-Hour Leave: When Rocket League Defeated Leukemia

The Two-Hour Leave: When Rocket League Defeated Leukemia

 

The 10-year-old was having a rough day fighting leukemia. Then, Officer Miller walked in, pulled out two controllers, and challenged him to a match.

Officer Miller was at a local community event when he met Ben’s mom. She told him how her 10-year-old son, who was battling leukemia, was obsessed with police cars and video games. He had been devastated that he was too sick to attend the event.

Officer Miller got an idea. The next day, he walked into the pediatric oncology ward with a backpack over his shoulder.

Ben was having a rough morning, tired and in pain. He barely looked up when the officer walked in.

“Hey, Ben,” Miller said, pulling up a chair. “I heard a rumor you’re pretty good at Rocket League.”

Ben’s eyes widened just a little.

“Well,” Miller said, pulling two PlayStation controllers from his bag. “I’m off duty, and I’ve got two hours. Think you can teach me a few things?”

For Ben, interacting with strangers was usually part of a routine involving needles and diagnostic questions. But this officer wasn’t here to ask. He was here to play.

For the next two hours, the beeping of the IV pump was drowned out by the sounds of virtual engines and Ben’s laughter. He wasn’t “Ben the cancer patient.” He was just a kid, schooling a cop in a video game.

Officer Miller didn’t try to win. He played just well enough to keep the match engaging, but silly enough that Ben howled with laughter whenever he messed up. When Ben scored a particularly awesome goal, Miller cheered and whistled. The boy beamed, momentarily forgetting his pain.

“That’s police technique,” Miller joked after scoring a fluke goal, which sent Ben into fits of laughter.

This video was taken by Ben’s mom. She said it was the first time she’d seen her son genuinely smile all week. He wasn’t just getting a visit; he was getting a break from the battle.

When the two hours were up, Miller packed up the controllers. “I gotta go, Captain Ben. I’m going to go study the new skills you taught me. You stay strong, teammate.”

Ben nodded, his face radiating a new calm.

Officer Miller couldn’t cure the cancer. But for two hours, he did something just as vital: He cured the normalcy. He reminded the boy that before he was a patient, he was a kid, and sometimes, the best medicine for the soul isn’t chemotherapy, but laughter and a PlayStation controller.

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