The day after I buried my parents, I became an adult. Not because I turned eighteen, but because someone tried to take the only family I had left. And I wasn’t about to let that happen.
Until that week, I had thought adulthood arrived slowly, in gentle steps: your first job, moving out, paying your own bills. I had imagined it as a careful unfolding. But it came instead like a storm that tore open the doors of my childhood and left me standing in the wreckage with a ten-year-old boy clinging to my hand.
Casseroles sat untouched. Cards were stacked in uneven piles. Everywhere I looked, there were quiet reminders that people had visited, spoken kind words, and then gone back to their lives, leaving us behind.Continue reading…