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I lost my eight-year-old son, Randy, just one week before Mother’s Day. At first, people around me described it as a sudden and unfortunate tragedy, something that could not have been predicted or prevented. Those words were meant to comfort me, but they felt distant, as if they belonged to someone else’s story rather than my own. I tried to accept them because rejecting them meant facing a pain too heavy to carry alone. But grief has a way of holding onto details that others overlook.
At first, I told myself it did not matter. Compared to the loss of my child, it felt like a meaningless detail. continue reading …
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