When Gudbranson was 11 years old, his younger brother, Dennis, was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia at age 6. Dennis faced six months of chemotherapy and went into remission, only to have the cancer come back. Eventually, he went through a bone marrow transplant, and luckily, he has been in remission for the past 15 years.
It was a trying time for the Gudbranson family, which was based in Ottawa, but there was plenty of support from the hockey world. Montreal captain Saku Koivu, himself a cancer survivor, actually called Dennis before the bone marrow transplant, and members of the Ottawa Senators visited the hospital where the Gudbransons spent far too much of their time.
"It's funny, I go into those rooms now and I remember specifically when Mike Fisher and Todd White came through our room and the feeling that my brother had afterwards," Gudbranson said. "That hour afterwards was just a smile on his face because of how cool that was. Me being in those shoes now, it's such a blessing. It's one of the most exciting things we get to do all year.
"A lot of those days, being in the hospital for months on end, they can become monotonous, they can become scary, and they can weigh on you. Just that little change of pace, it can provide a week, a month of happiness, honestly. It's incredibly important."
Gudbranson said Dennis is now doing fine, and in fact, Erik was the best man at his brother's wedding this summer. The CBJ defenseman acknowledges there were plenty of tough days for the family, but the good news is the Gudbransons now have lifelong connections to the doctors and nurses that cared for Dennis and helped save his life.
It also provides a fair amount of perspective that has lasted a lifetime.
"It's an awful disease, and I'm so happy the NHL puts this at the forefront, that we get to talk about this and try to find a cure to it because it's an awful disease," Gudbranson said. "It tears people apart from the inside out. The one thing that I will say, though -- I haven't met anybody who's had cancer that it's taken their soul away.
"Everybody always comes back stronger. Even through the tough times, mentally, spiritually, they become incredibly strong, thoughtful people that are incredibly amazing."