Adam Myers and Sloan Braith spent nearly a year and a half planning a wedding that they weren't sure would happen.
There had been two bouts of cancer for Myers and a seemingly endless list of medical obstacles. Doctors said radiation treatment in 2010 from a battle with skin cancer had likely caused the second round of cancer: acute myeloid leukemia.
Myers, 31, got his second diagnosis in December 2012. He was gearing up for another round of chemotherapy but eventually ended up in the hospital, losing about a pint of blood each day. A bone marrow transplant was his best chance at survival.
"I was suffocating from the inside out and blind in my right eye," said Myers, a cellphone and satellite TV salesman from North Branch. "I couldn't even remember how to start my car."
Things deteriorated quickly while the family searched for a donor, and Myers was told he may have as little as a week to live. At the last minute, he was saved by a stranger.
The match
Jeremy Gitzlaff, of Pewaukee, Wis., noticed a bone marrow donation table at an off-road truck race he attended a few years ago.
As an Iraq war veteran who served six years in the Marine Corps Reserve, Gitzlaff was used to donating blood. So when he saw the table, he thought: "I can do that, too!"
Gitzlaff, 30, signed up to donate at the BloodCenter of Wisconsin, one of the National Marrow Donor Program's affiliates, which operates Be the Match. He was sent a packet of cotton swabs to swipe his cheek.