Tatiana Schlossberg’s brother, Jack Schlossberg, is displaying his help after his sister revealed her terminal most cancers analysis.
On Saturday, November 22, Tatiana, 35, revealed in an essay titled “A Battle with My Blood,” printed by The New Yorker, that she was recognized with acute myeloid leukemia after welcoming her second child in Could 2024. Within the essay, Tatiana says she has been given one yr to reside because of her analysis.
“I didn’t — couldn’t — consider that they have been speaking about me. I had swum a mile within the pool the day earlier than, 9 months pregnant. I wasn’t sick. I didn’t really feel sick. I used to be truly one of many healthiest individuals I knew,” she wrote. “I had a son whom I cherished greater than something and a new child I wanted to care for.”
Hours later, Jack — who’s at present working for Congress within the hopes of representing New York’s twelfth congressional district, a seat at present held by Rep. Jerrold Nadler — shared a screenshot of the essay together with a hyperlink by way of his Instagram Tales. In one other put up, he shared a separate display screen shot of the essay’s opening paragraph.
“If you end up dying, a minimum of in my restricted expertise, you begin remembering the whole lot,” the paragraph reads. “Photographs are available in flashes — individuals and locations and stray conversations — and refuse to cease. I see my greatest buddy from elementary college as we make a mud pie in her again yard, prime it with candles and a tiny American flag, and watch, in panic, because the flag catches hearth. I see my school boyfriend sporting boat sneakers just a few days after a record-breaking snowstorm, slipping and falling right into a slush puddle. I need to break up with him, so I snort till I can’t breathe.”
In an obvious response to his sister’s essay, Jack additionally wrote, “Life is brief — let it rip.” The saying was first featured over a close-up image of a highway, additionally shared to his Instagram Tales. In one other put up, the identical message was shared over a photograph of a sky.

John “Jack” Schlossberg and Tatiana Schlossberg Getty Photographs
Tatiana — who shares her 3-year-old son and 1-year-old daughter together with her husband, George Mora — thanked Jack and their older sister, Rose Schlossberg, within the essay.
“George did the whole lot for me that he presumably might,” she wrote in her emotional essay. “He talked to all of the medical doctors and insurance coverage those who I didn’t need to speak to; he slept on the ground of the hospital; he didn’t get mad after I was raging on steroids and yelled at him that I didn’t like Schweppes ginger ale, solely Canada Dry. He would go house to place our youngsters to mattress and are available again to convey me dinner.”
She continued, “My dad and mom and my brother and sister, too, have been elevating my kids and sitting in my varied hospital rooms nearly day by day for the final yr and a half. They’ve held my hand unflinchingly whereas I’ve suffered, attempting to not present their ache and unhappiness as a way to defend me from it. This has been an incredible present, although I really feel their ache day by day.”
Tatiana additionally shared how her analysis made her robotically take into consideration her younger kids and what their life — and their reminiscences — shall be like with out her.
“My first thought was that my youngsters, whose faces reside completely on the within of my eyelids, wouldn’t keep in mind me,” she mentioned of studying of her terminal analysis. “My son may need just a few reminiscences, however he’ll most likely begin complicated them with photos he sees or tales he hears. I didn’t ever actually get to care for my daughter — I couldn’t change her diaper or give her a shower or feed her, all due to the danger of an infection after my transplants. I used to be gone for nearly half of her first yr of life. I don’t know who, actually, she thinks I’m, and whether or not she is going to really feel or keep in mind, when I’m gone, that I’m her mom.”


