Update Dec. 22, 2024:
A year later, Talyn Reimer, now 11, is doing well. Heâs been in remission from his cancer for nine months and finally can look forward to Christmas âlike a regular kid,â said mom Robbie Robidoux.
âNow he wants for Christmas all the things that normal kids want,â she told Cowboy State Daily. âHe wants video games and toys and stuff like that.â
Thatâs a more welcome list to fulfill than what he asked for last year, Robidoux said.
âIt was so heartbreaking last year to hear him say that all he wanted to do was live,â she said.
It seems Santa granted that wish, although Reimer isnât out of the woods yet, his mom said.
âThe cancer can come back at any point in time and we have to go back for scans and tests for the next 10 years,â she said. âHeâs still healing and having to cope with everything heâs been through.â
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As kids all over Wyoming were asking their parents and Santa for video games, smartphones and other devices for Christmas, 10-year-old Talyn Reimer of Rawlins had a much different wish.
He didnât want to die before the end of the year.
âThis whole year has been a horrible, rough year for him,â mom Bobbie Robidoux told Cowboy State Daily on Tuesday. âHe would say all he wanted for Christmas was to get through the year alive.â
Hearing that as your childâs Christmas wish âwas just heart-wrenchingâ and part of nearly a year Robidoux describes as âa nightmareâ for her son and family.
Thatâs because Talyn has been going through months of intense chemotherapy to shrink a giant tumor in his head that ate through his cheekbone and was pressing into his brain. The only thing that kept the tumor from eating into his brain as well was the thin membrane that surrounds it.
It Started With Headaches
The nightmare started in February when Talyn started complaining of headaches and soreness in his face, Robidoux said.
âHe was complaining about how he had pain in the side of his face, and I just blew it off as growing pains,â she said. âBut then it was going on for too long and we went to the doctor.â
What they found was enough to scare mother and son to their cores.
Talyn had a large tumor in the side of his face that had already eaten away his cheekbone and was close to break through to his brain.
âThey couldnât really measure how big it was, but it wasnât operable,â Robidoux said.
In the months since, Talyn has been undergoing some intense chemotherapy, traveling to Casper for some sessions and Denver for others.
And itâs worked. So far, the tumor has shrunk to the point doctors consider it gone, but by no means is Talyn out of the woods, his mother said. He still has another four months of chemo left. The treatment also has left him without an immune system, which means the 10-year-old could easily catch anything thatâs going around.
âIt can come back at any time in his life,â she said, adding that âin little bitty Rawlins, Wyoming, thereâs no place to do chemo.â
That means a lot of travel and the expenses involved with that.
âA Great Kidâ
While Robidoux said Talyn definitely understands how serious his condition is, and heâs scared. Heâs also still a regular 10-year-old who only wants to go out and play with other kids and play video games.
And while a lot of kids would love to not be able to go to school, Talyn canât go and is homeschooled because his immune system canât handle being around all those other kids right now.
âTalyn is an amazing young man,â said Valerie Ross, a family friend and former teacher for the boy. âHeâs so compassionate and caring and sweet. Heâs the kid who will go out of his way to get the baby bird thatâs fallen out of his next. Heâs compassionate beyond his age.â
Although he has every right to be angry and the world and down on himself for having to go through a life-threatening condition thatâs so rare itâs found in only one out of every 1 million kids, heâs not, Ross said.
âYou would think he would probably be a little down, but heâs not,â she said. âKids arenât supposed to deal with this stuff.â
A Different Christmas
Over the months, Robidouxâs truck has become a sanctuary of sorts for her. Itâs the time sheâs alone driving that sheâs able to blow off steam, vent her anger and fear. It started with the day she got one of the worst phone calls a mother could get.
She had just dropped Talyn off at school and was driving to work when his doctor in Denver called to break the news of the tumor.
When the doctor first told her about the tumor in her childâs head, Robidoux said she had a physical reaction.
âI couldnât even breathe,â she said. âI got the call when I was on my way to work. Once I got off the phone call, all I could do was start hitting my truck. I didnât know what else to do, I was just so angry. He doesnât deserve this.â
That began a week she describes as a âcomplete and total nightmare.â
Thatâs because after rushing Talyn to a hospital in Denver, it took a week before the test results came back to definitely diagnose her son.
He has a form of cancer called Langerhans cell histiocytosis, LCH for short, which is very rare and a cousin to leukemia.
âAt first, I just cried nonstop and I couldnât keep it together,â Robidoux said about getting the news. âBut I have to keep myself strong and keep it together for him and try to only break down in my truck when nobody else is looking. If my windows could talk, theyâd tell you a whole lot.â
Although she and Talynâs father Charles Reimer are no longer together, they coparent their son, and have both been supporting him throughout.
Christmas this year was different than any other one theyâve ever had, Robidoux said. Although there wasnât a lot of extra money for gifts, they didnât notice or care.
âIt went really well with just close family around,â she said. âWe werenât able to get him a ton of things, but he had enough.â
At Least One Wish Will Come True
After months of treatment, and with months more ahead, the Rawlins kid is about to have one wish come true. Make-A-Wish has granted Talynâs wish to have a gaming bedroom.
In a few weeks, his bedroom is going to be transformed into a dream spot any gamer would be jealous of, centered around a new PlayStation 5.
âHe loves video games, all kinds of games,â Robidoux said. âHe told me, âMom, this is the one good thing that happened out of a bad situation.ââ
Along with video games, Talyn âabsolutely loves Spider-Man,â she said.
The family doesnât have a lot, Ross said, but are âjust good people who deserve a break right now.â
Thatâs why sheâs started a GoFundMe campaign to help Talyn and his family. As of Tuesday, it has raised $775 of a $2,500 goal. A Christmas evening showing at the local movie theater raised $1,500.
Robidoux said her employer also has been a huge help with whatever sheâs needed to do to deal with her sonâs medical needs.
âThe place I work is absolutely amazing, Elk Mountain Diesel,â she said. âThey allow me to work full time and they allow me to bring Talyn with me and I homeschool him here. They understand that sometimes I have to just take off.â
If thereâs a local family that deserves a little help, itâs Talyn and his parents, Ross said.
âThey live very modestly, but never complain or bad-mouth others,â she said. âIf anyone deserves a little help, itâs them.â
For Talynâs parents, the goal remains the same â to keep as much normalcy as possible for Talyn.
Early on, he was scared of everything, his mom said.
âHe wasnât laughing, he wasnât smiling,â she said. âHe was even afraid of school, and heâs still afraid and still scared. He was scared of everything in the world for awhile there.â
The key is to make sure they live their lives as normal as possible, even when itâs not possible.
âI try to make sure heâs still the same kid, but we have to protect him because he doesnât have an immune system and there are times when he gets down and sad,â Robidoux said.
But most of the time, heâs the same Talyn as before the tumor.
And he did get what he wished for â Talynâs alive and doing well going into the New Year.
âHealth-wise, heâs doing good,â Ribidoux said. âHeâs still definitely very low on energy and canât run and play like he used to, but he does try. And heâs very scared of the world and what could happen. Thereâs a lot there a little guy shouldnât have to go through.â
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.









