Meet Long Island wrestler who beat cancer twice and overcame paralysis before emotional WWE debut
He wouldn’t stay down for the count.
Long Island’s Sean Wachter was given only three months to live after doctors discovered stage 4 melanoma that became a malignant brain tumor a decade ago.
“I had a massive stroke that was caused by the golf ball-sized tumor. I had a rare complication called leptomeningeal disease, where the cancer spreads to your spinal fluid,” he told The Post, recalling the darkest days of his life.
Wachter, 40, a wrestling fanatic who played college football and lacrosse at Nassau Community College, was preparing for the worst in what he expected to be his final days.
The Oceanside native often recited a quote by the late sportscaster Stuart Scott, who died of appendiceal cancer in 2015.
“When you die, it does not mean that you lose to cancer. You beat cancer by how you live, why you live, and in the manner in which you live,” the quote goes.
