left me with our newborn twin daughters, Emma and Clara.
Lauren didn’t respond the same way. To her, it felt like a life sentence she never agreed to serve.
Three weeks after we brought the babies home, I woke to an empty bed and a note on the kitchen counter:
“I can’t do this. I have dreams. I’m sorry.”
That was all. No number. No address. Just a woman choosing herself over two helpless infants who needed their mother.
Life blurred into bottles, diapers, and figuring out how to navigate a world built for people who could see.
She saw it as a
life sentence
she hadn’t signed up for.
Most days, I had no clue what I was doing. I devoured every book I could find about raising children with visual impairments. I learned braille before they could form sentences. I reorganized our entire apartment so they could move safely, memorizing every corner and sharp edge.
And somehow, we made it through.
But surviving isn’t the same as truly living, and I was determined to give them more than that.
When the girls turned five, I taught them how to sew.
It began as a way to occupy their hands, to strengthen fine motor skills and spatial awareness. But it grew into something far greater.
But survival isn’t the same as living,
and I was determined to give them
more than that.
Emma could run her fingers across fabric and identify it instantly by texture alone.
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