A MUM-of-one was told she has days to live years after being given the all-clear for a dodgy looking mole â as the cancer spread to her stomach and brain, causing 12 tumours.
Belinda Ainsworth’s daughter Charlie Ainsworth, 37, was diagnosed with in 2016, after noticing an unusual-looking mole on her leg that lingered for a few months.




She had the mole removed and was given the all clear â but was told by doctors last year that the disease had returned and she has got 12 and two masses in her stomach.
The mum-of-one has been told by specialist palliative care doctors that she has days to live which has left Belinda, 59, “absolutely broken”;;.
Speaking from Charlie’s bedside, Belinda said: “My heart is absolutely broken. Charlie’s not just my daughter, she’s my best friend.
“We do everything together â absolutely everything.
“I just can’t imagine my life without her.”;;
She is now pleading with other people to .
Belinda said: “Any slight changes in a mole or anything [unusual] means that you need to get it checked out.”;;
Charlie was first diagnosed with skin cancer in 2016, after discovering an .
But she had the mole removed and was given the all-clear.
Charlie, of Accrington, Lancs., then realised she had a lump on her leg but was repeatedly told by her GP that it was a â soft, fatty lumps that grow under the skin, which are benign.
In 2024, it was discovered that her cancer had returned and had spread to her lungs and hip, and she had two brain tumours.
Charlie had chemotherapy tablets and two rounds of radiotherapy but has now been told she has 12 brain tumours and two masses in her stomach.
Belinda said: “Charlie had been in the hospital for 12 days and she couldn’t use her left leg, she’s lost use of all of her left side.
“One of tumours has gone aggressively and she’s got swelling in the brain.



“They have told me that there is no treatment they can give her and now she’s got days to live.”;;
Charlie was eight when she was diagnosed with an â which happens when the thyroid gland doesn’t produce enough hormones â and she got told she was type one diabetic a year later.
Because of her , she was told she would never be able to have children but found out she was pregnant in 2016.
While she was pregnant, her and she was advised by doctors to terminate the â but the mum decided against it and and gave birth to her son Elijah in 2017.
Charlie was placed on and had to have both a .
Belinda, a hospital ward clerk, has now had to tell Elijah, now seven, that his mum isn’t going to get better.
Belinda said: “Elijah has always been used to Charlie being in and out of hospital so normally it doesn’t phase him.
“This time it’s different because we’ve fetched her home and she can’t use her left side and she is so poorly.
“We’ve had to sit him down and tell him that mummy isn’t going to get better.
“He just sobbed.”;;
Belinda has now set up a Go Fund Me page to help pay for Charlie’s and any extra will be given to Elijah when he’s older.
You can donate to the page here.



