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From 'Why Me?' to 'Why Not Me?': A Cancer Survivor's Radical Reframe of Hope and Positivity

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From 'Why Me?' to 'Why Not Me?': A Cancer Survivor's Radical Reframe of Hope and Positivity


Springhill - June 6, 2026 - He heard the words no one wants to hear: "You have thymic carcinoma. You have twelve months to live." That was more than a decade ago. Michael Delaney did not smile his way through chemotherapy or pretend his fear did not exist. Instead, he changed one question. He stopped asking "Why me?" and started asking "Why not me?" That single shift in perspective became the foundation of his new book, "Why Not Me? A Positive Approach for Patients and Families Who Are Fighting Cancer."


Delaney has lived through six surgeries, four rounds of chemotherapy, 28 radiation treatments, and nearly 200 rounds of immunotherapy. He drained his retirement savings to join a clinical trial in Washington, D.C., traveling every three weeks for two years. He has watched the cancer return, then return again. And he still photographs sunsets. Not sunrises. Sunsets. Because each sunset means he made it through one more day. That quiet ritual captures the soul of this book: honesty, not fantasy.


The core message of "Why Not Me?" cuts through the noise of toxic positivity. Delaney argues that genuine positivity does not mean hiding fear, anger, or sadness. It means feeling those emotions fully and then asking, "What can I still do today?" Realistic optimism, as he calls it, accepts the hard medical facts while searching for possibilities inside those facts. The book targets cancer patients at any stage, from newly diagnosed to long-term survivors, as well as family members, caregivers, and oncology professionals who want to build a culture of hope around their patients.


Delaney writes with the directness of a business executive and the vulnerability of a man who has cried in hospital waiting rooms. He does not lecture. He sits beside you. His sentences are short, his stories concrete, and his advice practical. You will find no vague platitudes here. Instead, he offers specific tools: how to organize a medical command center, what questions to ask before a scan, and how to let family members help without feeling like a burden.


The book also includes several motivational pictures that punctuate its chapters. One shows a warm sunset, the kind Delaney photographs daily. Another captures hands forming a heart shape on World Cancer Day. A third depicts a grandfather and grandchild sharing a quiet moment of connection. These images are not decorative. They serve as visual anchors for the book's central practice: finding small, beautiful evidence that life continues even in the middle of treatment.


Delaney co-founded the Thymic Carcinoma Center, a nonprofit that connects over 1,300 patients across 65 countries. He wrote this book because he wishes someone had handed it to him the day he received his diagnosis. "Why Not Me?" supports his earlier work, "It’s Not Just About Cancer – It’s About Hope.” Together, these books argue that hope is not a passive feeling. Hope is a daily practice of showing up, asking one more question, and choosing to live fully even when the future stays uncertain.


“Why Not Me? A Positive Approach for Patients and Families Who Are Fighting Cancer.” is available now on Amazon and at all major online stores, as well as major retailers including Barnes & Noble and independent bookstores.

For more information, review copies, or to schedule an interview with Michael Delaney, please contact:

Michael Delaney

Author's Email:

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About the Author

Meet Michael Delaney. He is a husband, father, grandfather, and a long-term survivor of thymic carcinoma. When doctors gave him one year to live, he refused to let fear write his story. Instead, he co-founded the Thymic Carcinoma Center, a nonprofit that helps rare cancer patients find expert care, financial assistance, and real hope. He has endured six surgeries, four chemos, 28 radiation treatments, and nearly 200 rounds of immunotherapy. Yet every evening, you will find him photographing the sunset. That simple act, he says, is his victory. He lives in Kansas with his family and continues to fight for every sunrise. And every sunset.



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