the disease eventually left him blind in his left eye.for years, tokoi had to travel from his home toylvania for chemotherapy and radiation. he also suffered one relapse."right now, he is been pretty stable. we have one more visit in july and if he is stable for one more month, he is officially in remission," said his mom, ashley tokoi.when the make-a- wish foundation asked tokoi what he wanted--the little boy had one simple request."he just wanted to do something with trains and he loves the beach, so we just left it wide open with that," tokoi said. tokoi loved the model trains and the ride on a small train with the conductor.tokoi's mom is grateful to the make-a-wish foundation for giving them a break from worrying about her son's health."the people who do donate or donate time, i'm getting choked up," she said. "it's so sweet."on tuesday, tokoi gets a private visit to an exclusive home in montecito to check out a model railroad. the family will also get a private, behind the scenes tour of the santa barbara zoo. (vicki) that wraps up kron 4 news at 5.(granti) steve aveson and pam