Families can bring out both the best and the absolute worst in us. I always believed mine leaned toward the best side—until one day, they pushed me to my breaking point. What happened at my stepsister’s wedding still feels unreal, like something straight out of a movie. The only difference was, I wasn’t watching it from a theater seat. I was living it.
My name is Esther. I’m 32, I live in Indiana, and I work as a registered dietitian. People usually describe me as calm, patient, and even “too forgiving.” For a long time, I thought that was a strength. But life has a cruel way of testing patience until it feels like it’s stretched so thin, it might snap.
I lost my mom when I was 23 years old, and nothing in this world prepared me for that kind of pain. She wasn’t just my mom—she was my light. The kind of woman who made an entire room feel warmer just by walking in. She always smelled faintly of vanilla, and she had scarves in every color of the rainbow. I still remember her telling me once, with a smile in her eyes:
“Life is already heavy, Esther. Wear color like you mean it.”
Her death shattered me, not only because I loved her so deeply, but because it was preventable. A careless doctor, a missed diagnosis, and a second opinion that came too late—that’s all it took to rip her away. Suddenly, the brightest part of my life was gone.