
When most people hear the name “Rocky,” they think of a fighter. For six-year-old Rocky Calvert of Appalachian, Alabama, that name is more than fitting—it is a reflection of a life spent battling from the very beginning.
Rocky was born with vanishing gastroschisis, a rare condition that left his survival uncertain from birth. While other babies learned to crawl, Rocky spent his first year in the ICU, dependent on machines to breathe and eat. That year was only the start of a life marked by relentless medical challenges, including seizures, severe blood loss, infections, pneumonia, and lymph node cancer.
Over the years, Rocky has endured a triple organ transplant—receiving a liver, small bowel, and pancreas—and had his spleen removed. Each surgery tested a body far too young to carry such burdens. Still, Rocky has never stopped fighting.
Just weeks ago, he stood on a baseball field to throw the first pitch at a playoff game, a moment of joy and normalcy that symbolized hope. But last Friday, Rocky was rushed back to Children’s of Alabama. He is now in the ICU, battling pneumonia in both lungs and relying on a ventilator to breathe.
Rocky dreams of becoming a professional baseball player. For now, the most important goal is healing. And with strength, prayers, and support, Rocky Calvert continues to fight—one breath at a time.