Television legend John Tesh was given 18 months to live. That was a decade ago. Doctors called his rare, metastatic prostate cancer
“frightening,” warned it might be inoperable, and braced his family for goodbye.
But one person refused to accept that ending. Her decision, a desperate phone call, and a last-chance trip to Houst… Continues…
When John Tesh first heard “18 months to live,” it sounded like a sentence, not a prognosis. Stage 3 prostate cancer, spreading, “rare,” and “metastatic” —
the words stacked up like closing doors. Treatments bought time, but never the word everyone longs for: remission
. Instead, doctors “pulsed” his therapy, letting the cancer grow, then hitting it again. Living with cancer became his new, terrifying normal.
Through it all, his wife, actress Connie Sellecca, refused to let statistics write his story. When options ran out, she reached back decades to two old friends and found a lifeline at
MD Anderson in Houston, a center with deeper experience in his rare form of cancer.
Tesh says plainly he “shouldn’t even be alive,” and credits Connie as the reason he’s still here to say it.
Today his disease is stable, his gratitude fierce, and every extra day feels like borrowed light.