My 17-Year-Old Son Sha:ved His Head for His Sic:k Girlfriend – The Next Day, Her Mother Said, ‘You Need to Come to the Hospital and See What Your Son Did’

My 17-Year-Old Son Sha:ved His Head for His Sic:k Girlfriend – The Next Day, Her Mother Said, ‘You Need to Come to the Hospital and See What Your Son Did’

I’ve always been proud of the kind, compassionate young man my son was becoming. Then, one unexpected phone call made me question everything I thought I knew about him.

The morning was ordinary, just as I’d started to treasure. I stood at the kitchen sink, watching the September light spill across the counter, and listened to my son rummage through the pantry for the third time in 10 minutes.

By the age of 39, I had learned that peace is usually quiet and often a gift.

“Mom, did you hide the granola bars again?”

Aaron’s voice came from somewhere behind the cereal boxes.

I had learned that peace is usually quiet.

My son was 17, tall, and has always been one of the kindest people I know.

He was holding open a plastic bag as if he were packing for a trip.

“They’re on the second shelf, where they always are,” I said. “Who eats four granola bars?”

“Lily likes the chocolate ones. The hospital food is awful,” Aaron said casually, the way other kids might mention a coffee run.

He was holding open a plastic bag.

I dried my hands and watched him pack the bag with the same careful attention he’d once applied to his Lego sets.

Aaron had always been like that. Good grades, no trouble, the kind of boy who notices when a kid sits alone at lunch, and the type who steps in when someone else is hurting.

When my son started dating Lily a year ago, I called Diane that same night, feeling giddy.

Diane has been one of my closest friends for over a decade. Our children, well, her daughter and my son, had practically grown up together.

Aaron had always been like that.

The first time Aaron held Lily’s hand at a backyard barbecue last summer, Diane and I pretended not to notice and then laughed and squealed about it like schoolgirls for an hour in the kitchen!

We were both thrilled! Our children were good together, and it was obvious how much they cared about each other.

Then everything changed.

Four months ago, my son’s girlfriend was diagnosed with cancer.