When my only son died, I thought I’d buried every chance at family. Five years later, a new boy entered my classroom with a familiar birthmark and a smile that shattered everything I thought I’d healed. I wasn’t ready for what came next, or the hope it brought with it.
Hope is dangerous when it shows up wearing your dead child’s identical birthmark.
Five years ago, I buried my son.
Some mornings, the ache still feels as sharp as that first phone call.
I buried my son.
Most people see me as Ms. Rose, the reliable kindergarten teacher with extra tissues and band-aids.
But behind every routine, I carry a world that’s missing one person.
I used to think loss would heal.
My world ended the night I lost Owen. The hardest part isn’t the funeral or the empty house; it’s how life insists on continuing, even when yours has stopped.
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