Aaron and I began counseling, learning how to talk again—not just about schedules and logistics, but about guilt, anger, and the resentment we hadn’t realized we carried. Weeks later, we cried together for the first time, sitting on the kitchen floor while June slept upstairs.
One night, as I tucked June into bed, she asked quietly, “Did I do something wrong?”
“No,” I said immediately. “You told the truth.”
“Even when people get mad?”
“Especially then.”
Spring arrived slowly. The nursery stayed empty, but we repainted it—not to erase the twins, but to reclaim the room. June chose the color, a soft green she said reminded her of being outside.
Aaron began volunteering at a local family center. I joined a support group for parents navigating loss. Healing didn’t mean forgetting—it meant learning how to carry love and grief at the same time.
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