About the Author

Tom Walsh grew up in north central Kansas in a small farming community named Concordia. Calling the wheat fields of Kansas his boyhood home, Tom was the oldest of seven boys and one year younger than his sister Margie. At age fifteen, Tom’s parents moved their large family of eight kids to Denver, Colorado in search of more opportunities for their children. Upon graduation from high school, Tom attended college in Tulsa, Oklahoma where he met his wife Dacia. Deciding to plant their roots in the western suburbs of Tulsa, Tom began his career teaching Spanish to junior high school age students. It would be only six years later when he made the transition to elementary school principal where he would spend the remainder of his thirty-year career. Tom retired after three decades in public education in the year 2020. It was also the time our country was thrust into the COVID-19 pandemic. Although his immediate retirement plans were delayed, Tom began the process of writing his oldest son Isaac’s health story in an effort to spread an awareness of pediatric cancer.

Currently, Tom frequently volunteers at El Shalom Children’s Orphanage and Brenner School in Santiago Texacuangos, El Salvador. Relishing the opportunity to return to the classroom, Tom reconnects with his past by being a volunteer teacher to those less fortunate than him. He plans twice annual trips to see the orphan children who have referred to him as their “padrino.” (Spanish for godfather)

Tom is an accomplished speaker who has spoken at numerous fundraising events including the St. Jude Executive Summit in New York City and the St. Jude Board of Directors Meeting. During his time at St. Jude, he gave numerous interviews to various media outlets and allowed his son’s story to be used in marketing materials for fundraising purposes. In addition, Tom has spoken at several education conferences during his long tenure as a school leader.

Currently, Tom and his wife Dacia reside in Sapulpa, Oklahoma. Dacia having retired from public education in 2019, now works as a relationship banker at a local bank. Tom is currently pursuing his dream to bring hope to the brokenhearted and healing to those whose lives have been upended by the permanent scars of pediatric cancer. For Tom, there is no greater honor than saving the life of a child. In a small way, Tom hopes by sharing his family’s struggle it will further the research to find a cure for this horrible disease.