I’ll never forget that day. My seven-year-old son, Leo, was playing on the climbing structure at our neighborhood park, laughing and full of life. The sun was shining, the air was warm, and I watched him with pride. And then… it happened. One sudden, silent thud, and my world shattered. Leo would never open his eyes again.
I rushed him to the hospital, and the doctors did everything they could. He was placed on life support while I prayed desperately for a miracle. The machines beeped, the voices of the doctors sounded distant, and I felt as if I were watching everything from underwater. When life support was turned off, the silence crushed me. Never again would I hear his laughter, tuck him in, or see him leave his shoes by the door.
Grief didn’t just hit me—it hit Mark, my husband, too. He was consumed with guilt over taking Leo to the park, and instead of coming together, our pain drove him away. I was left surrounded by reminders of the life that had been stolen—Leo’s backpack, his shoes, his crayons—everywhere I looked, I felt the weight of his absence.
Through it all, Dr. Aris stayed by my side. She held my hand in the ICU and said, “Hold on. Don’t give the pain the victory.” Slowly, I started to rebuild. I joined a grief support group, planted Leo’s favorite flowers, and wrote him letters about the life he would never get to see. Those small rituals became my way of surviving the unbearable.
Two years later, I saw Dr. Aris again at a trauma symposium. Her story of loss and survival inspired me, and together, we launched Leo’s Light, a program to support families facing medical trauma. Sharing my story has become my purpose, turning the heartbreak of losing Leo into a way to help others. Though my life will never be the same without him, his legacy shines in every life we touch.