I’ll call her Rebecca. She’s from Washington D.C. Her email started off like this:
“Dear Sean, I don’t know what to do, my mother just died of brain cancer… I am only 18 years old, and she was all I have left…
“She read your Facebook posts, and I am hurting... I know you can’t help me, but I don’t know who else to tell.”
Well, Rebecca, I took the liberty of contacting a few friends who have stories you might be interested in hearing.
First, meet John. He is 36 years young, he works in food service, and he drives a ‘03 Toyota. He has great insurance. He doesn’t have a lot of money, but he’s pretty happy.
He hasn’t always been happy, of course. His dad died when he was 21 years old. John has quite a tale.
His father was a single dad. They grew up together. They were poor. When his dad died, John went into catatonic shock. He quit leaving his apartment. He ate only frozen pizzas only and somehow—the lucky stiff—managed to lose
weight.
But John’s life was not over. After a few years, John met Megan. Megan was six years older, and beautiful. But more than that, Megan was a caregiver for her ill mother, so she understood things. Big things.
Sometimes they would talk. She seemed to be the only human who “got” him.
They were soon married. And finally, John was introduced to the joys of being unable to use his own closet.
“I never thought I’d smile again,” John writes, “but I’m happier than I’ve ever been in my life.”
Now meet Charry. She is 49. She and her mother were tight. They were so close that for Charry’s senior prom, long ago, she didn’t have a traditional date, she attended with her mother. Which, if you ask me, is bizarre. (“And now presenting the happy couple!”)
Her mother died…
