AUBURN, Ala. – When you see 7-year-old Davis Boswell playing football with his brother on Samford Lawn or baseball for his team, the Cubs, you’d never know he’s only one week removed from chemotherapy.
“He doesn’t let the medicines or the hospital bring him down,” said Tucker Boswell, Davis’ father. “He’s resilient and he’s grown up with this. He’s a fighter. Tough kid.”
This spring, Davis was diagnosed with PTLD, post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder, nearly seven years after the heart transplant that saved his life as an infant.
“It’s like being struck by lightning twice,” said Amanda Boswell, Davis’ mother. “We’re fighting our second battle, but we refuse to lose. He refuses to lose.
“Davis is full of life. He is like the Energizer bunny. He never stops. Very little slows him down. He’s so silly. He would be the most perfect Aubie.”
“Davis is 100 miles an hour all the time,” Tucker Boswell said. “He does not have a stop button. Constant energy. It’s hard to be around him and not smile and laugh.”