When my husband died, I thought the hardest part would be learning to live with the grief. I was wrong. Just a few days after the funeral, our son refused to sleep in his bed—and that’s when I realized how much I didn’t actually know.
Daniel and I had been married for sixteen years before cancer took him from us.
We had six children together: Caleb, who was ten, Emma, eight, the twins Lily and Nora, both six, Jacob, who was four, and little Sophie, just two years old when Daniel passed.
Before his diagnosis, our life had been simple in the best possible way.
Saturday mornings meant pancakes and cartoons. Daniel always flipped the pancakes too soon, and Caleb would laugh and say, “Dad, you never wait long enough.”
Daniel would just smile and reply, “Patience is overrated.”
I used to roll my eyes, but deep down, I loved that about him—how dependable he was.
He paid every bill on time, fixed anything that broke, and never forgot a single birthday.
He was a devoted father and a loving husband.
Then, two years before he died, everything changed. The doctor told us he had cancer, and from that moment, nothing felt steady anymore.
I became the one who organized everything—appointments, research, schedules.
Daniel stayed strong for the kids. He kept his voice calm, his smile steady. But at night, when it was just the two of us, he would hold my hand tightly and whisper, “I’m scared, Claire.”
Even on his worst days, he sat on the living room floor with the kids, building Lego sets.
Sometimes he had to stop to catch his breath, but he never let them see how much it took out of him.
I admired him. I trusted him. I believed I knew everything about the man I married.
Three weeks before I found the box, he died in our bedroom at 2 a.m., after fighting as hard as he could.
The house was silent except for the soft hum of the oxygen machine beside the bed.
I pressed my forehead against his and whispered, “You can’t leave me.”
He gave me a faint smile.
“You’ll be okay,” he said quietly. “You’re stronger than you think.”
But in that moment, I didn’t feel strong at all.
It felt like the ground beneath me had completely disappeared.