The sentence that stayed with me during Deborah’s final hours—“I brought my daughter into the world, and I took her out of it”—felt both true and impossibly heavy. Sitting beside her bed, holding her hand, time seemed to slow into something quiet and unreal.
There is no guide for walking with your child toward the end of her life. Parents are not meant to outlive their children or whisper reassurances they never imagined saying. I held her then with the same strength I held her at birth—this time guiding her toward peace.
Her hands felt smaller than I remembered, hands that once tied shoes, comforted her children, and fought relentlessly for life. Grief and relief settled together: grief at losing her, relief that her suffering was finally ending.
For five and a half years, Deborah battled stage 4 bowel cancer through surgeries, treatments, hope, and heartbreak. Death hovered close, yet she resisted with astonishing courage and an unbreakable spirit.
She fought for her children, Hugo and Eloise, for her husband, for friends, and for strangers who found comfort in her honesty. By sharing her journey publicly, she encouraged others to seek help, start conversations, and pay attention to their bodies.
When hospice was mentioned, she stayed calm. She asked only that we keep things light, that her children not be afraid. Even facing death, she wanted warmth and laughter around those she loved.
Her final days were gentle. She slept more, spoke softly, and focused on her children’s futures. On her last morning, I told her it was okay to rest. She slipped away peacefully, with a quiet breath.
Now, grief comes in waves, but her presence remains. Her legacy lives in lives she touched, awareness she raised, and love she spread. Deborah’s life was not defined by its length, but by its depth, courage, and immeasurable impact.