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“Go to Anna’s grave together. Not to replace anything—just to acknowledge what was.”
So one soft April morning, we drove to St. Mary’s Cemetery.
The sky was clear, the air cool. I set lilies on Anna’s headstone—the same kind I’d brought the night before my wedding.
Something inside me cracked—this time not from pain, but from gratitude. Anna wasn’t a ghost anymore. She was a chapter, not a chain.
Months later, Claire and I found out we were expecting. When our daughter was born, we named her Grace—because that’s what the past year had taught us.
I knelt beside her and said, “Her name was Anna. She’s in heaven. I loved her very much. And because I loved her, I learned how to love you and Mommy even more.”
We visited Anna’s grave once more that year—this time as a family. Not to mourn, but to honor.
I finally believed her.
Love doesn’t replace. It expands. And when we allow it to grow, it can turn loss into something that gives life instead of taking it.
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