From the moment Braden West took his first breath, doctors believed he wouldn’t survive. The outlook was heartbreaking, the odds impossibly slim—but what followed became one of the most inspiring comeback stories imaginable. Now 22, Braden is not only thriving… he’s fulfilling a lifelong dream as a firefighter.
Braden was born with Pfeiffer syndrome Type 2—a rare condition that causes severe skull and facial abnormalities. Just weeks before his arrival, his mother, Cheri, learned the devastating diagnosis. Doctors warned her that parts of his skull hadn’t formed correctly and that he was unlikely to live long after birth.
But the moment she held him, something shifted. Instead of preparing for goodbyes, Cheri found herself fighting for moments—any moments—she could have with her son. Doctors expected him to survive only a matter of months. Cheri simply prayed for time.
Braden’s condition was immediately clear: his skull had the signature cloverleaf shape of his syndrome. After just one month, doctors sent him home—not because he was getting better, but so he could spend what they believed would be his final days surrounded by family.
Instead, Braden began rewriting the script.
With constant love and support, he pushed through milestones no one thought possible. He endured more than 30 surgeries, received a tracheotomy as an infant, and survived a high-risk procedure with only a 10% chance of success. His parents even had to sign DNR papers, believing they might lose him—yet Braden made it through once again.
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