ISU Freshman Diagnosed with Leukemia as Sorority Rallies Around Her: 'Hoping and Praying' for Recovery (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Olivia Bieri and her family.Photo:Tamberlyn Bieri

19-Year-Old Olivia Bieri Was Living the Life She Once Dreamed Of And Then, Her Neck Began to Hurt

Tamberlyn Bieri

Olivia Bieri was having the time of her life in the fall of 2023.

A freshman at Illinois State University, Bieri had just pledged her dream sorority Kappa Kappa Gamma and was beginning the required classes to fulfill her bachelor’s degree in nursing.

“I struggled a lot in high school with friends and everything,” Bieri, 19, tells PEOPLE. “But I finally was able to find my people (in college), and I was just so happy. Everything felt so perfect.”

In February 2023 she took an 11-hour train ride to Conway, Arkansas, to see her boyfriend of over four years.

But on the long ride back to ISU, Bieri felt a strange pain.

“I just thought I had a crick in my neck or something,” Bieri recalls. “I didn’t think it was a big deal.”

Olivia Bieri with her mom Tamberlyn, Dad David, and brother Jacob.Tamberlyn Bieri

19-Year-Old Olivia Bieri Was Living the Life She Once Dreamed Of And Then, Her Neck Began to Hurt

Once she returned to school, the Missouri native was given muscle relaxers from ISU doctors to combat the neck pain. But she was also given strict instructions to immediately come back if the pain didn’t get better in the coming days.

And the pain didn’t get better.

“I went back, and everything was just so swollen, you could tell something was wrong,” Bieri remembers. “They did an X-ray and did my CBC (complete blood cell) counts and that’s when they noticed my white blood cells were super high. They told me that I had to go to the emergency room immediately.”

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From left: Jacob, David, Olivia and Tamberlyn Bieri.Tamberlyn Bieri

19-Year-Old Olivia Bieri Was Living the Life She Once Dreamed Of And Then, Her Neck Began to Hurt

A few days later at Carle BroMenn Medical Center in Normal, Illinois, Bieri says she began to sense that something wasverywrong.

“I kind of figured out on my own,” remarks Bieri. “I’m a nursing student, so I’ve got that medical brain. I know some of the terms. The doctor said he wanted to transfer me to the oncology department at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis. That’s all he had to say. I knew oncology meant cancer.”

It was there that Bieri began her fight against leukemia.

Olivia Bieri.Tamberlyn Bieri

19-Year-Old Olivia Bieri Was Living the Life She Once Dreamed Of And Then, Her Neck Began to Hurt

“Shocked is not descriptive enough,” Bieri’s mother Tamberlyn Bieri says of first hearing of her daughter’s diagnosis of acute leukemia with undifferentiated lineage. “My husband (David Bieri) and I were so happy that she was finally able to be happy and thriving at school. She had found wonderful friends, had excellent grades, and she was really expanding her horizons. To see this all snatched away from her is devastating.”

“My husband and were both Greeks, so we know all the good things about Greek life, but the reality is that Greek life gets such a bad rap,” says Tamberlyn.

“To see not only her sorority, but the fraternities and the other sororities rallying around her has just been overwhelming and makes me feel so proud of the Greek community. It’s a family no matter what house you’re in.”

Olivia Bieri with her sorority sisters at Illinois State University.Tamberlyn Bieri

19-Year-Old Olivia Bieri Was Living the Life She Once Dreamed Of And Then, Her Neck Began to Hurt

Her family has also set up aGoFundMe.

And if all goes as Bieri hopes, she will get that bone marrow transplant and ultimately return to school in the fall.

“I’m supposed to live in the house next year, and I’m just hoping and praying that I’ll be able to do that,” Bieri says quietly. “The biggest thing I miss right now is just being at school. I’d much rather be stressing about tests than stressing out about cancer.”

source: people.com