There's a lot on the plate of an NFL starting quarterback.

Josh Allen chooses to pile on more outside of One Bills Drive, regularly visiting and helping Oishei Children's Hospital, a partnership drawn together because of Allen's experiences growing up with a brother battling a rare disease.

"I remember just being there and the mood is just not fantastic, especially with young children and families going through things. I just want people to know that go there that there are people that care about them and that there are people there for them to lean on. That they don't have to go through any situation alone. And for me to kind of go and go to the hospital and sometimes these visits are tough. Seeing young children in the state that they're in and just kind of going in. But when I go in and I can see them smile and I can make their day and I can talk to their family and the joy that it brings me to see them happy, that's priceless right there,” said Allen.

Teenagers Charlie Logel and Clayton Pike are two who know all too well about Oishei.

"I got in a dirt bike accident and last thing I remember is waking up in the hospital and didn't really remember what happened and there was people in there when I woke up and I don't even remember that,” said Logel.

"The night of the Bills-Colts game during 2017 with all the snow, me and my friends were playing in the backyard and I had a spinal cord injury and broke my fifth vertebrae in my neck,” said Pike.

Both boys beat the odds by finding a path on the road to recovery, a lot in thanks to the efforts at Oishei.

And the hospital came through once again recently with an opportunity of a lifetime.

"We got called and one day they were like, ‘Hey, do you want to come in and design a cleat with Josh Allen?’ I was excited to go in and stuff. We went in and their parents, my parents, they were talking about everything with the shoes and I just kind of went up there and had some things pop up in my head and just kind of started drawing them down, just sketching stuff up,” said Logel, Pioneer High School student.

"Green is the traumatic injury awareness color, so I knew I wanted to incorporate some of the green color or the green ribbon throughout the cleat. Then Josh had the idea for the zubaz pants, I think they're called? To do that with the green and neon yellow color on the back. So just incorporating a mix of ideas that everyone had in the cleat,” said Pike, Canisius High School student.

Big Bills fans collaborating with the Bills QB for Allen's My Cause My Cleats: a bright spot coming from an unfortunate time.

"It's unbelievable what they had to go through and what their families had to go through, the perseverance they had to go through and they showed. So I really wanted to bring awareness to that, especially playing football where sometimes injuries like that do happen. If we can raise awareness and we can raise some funds to help kids that are put in these situations that maybe aren't so lucky, that's really all it is about. Raising awareness and trying to bring it to a good cause just to let kids know that they're not alone. That there's kids that have been in their situation that have gone through it. They've persevered and they've come out of it on top,” said Allen.

"It just brings awareness to just trauma injuries in general. We have different injuries, but they're both very similar. Just being able to say we both beat the odds basically and we were able to do something great like this to show people can overcome anything if they try hard enough,” said Pike.

And now Charlie and Clayton are connected to the QB beyond just the artwork on his feet.

"For these two guys, we're boys now. I came out and it's just like we picked up where we left off and it's nothing like, 'I did this once.' Those kids have been through a lot and I really care about them and their stories and how they've helped me and the inspiration they've given me. I try and give the same back to them,” said Allen.

Another step in Josh Allen's rise off the field as well.