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In the rigid hierarchy of the world, we are often taught that greatness is a mountain climbed through accolades, academic credentials, and the slow accumulation of prestigious titles. We are conditioned to look for it in the corner offices of skyscrapers or behind the lecterns of ivy-covered universities. However, my own understanding of greatness was dismantled and rebuilt not in a classroom, but within the cramped, sun-streaked walls of a two-bedroom apartment, shaped by a young woman who possessed no degree, but an infinite capacity for sacrifice.
She was barely nineteen, an age when most young people are navigating the exhilarating narcissism of early adulthood, worrying about midterms or social standing. But as she stood beside my mother’s casket, she appeared to have aged decades in a single afternoon. Her composure was not a sign of emotional distance, but the first manifestation of a granite-like resolve. In that instant, she realized she was no longer just a sibling; she was my solitary anchor in a world that had suddenly become dangerously unsteady.
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