They Forgot About Me—Until a Lottery Win Put My Name Back on Their Radar
For years, I lived in the quiet space families don’t talk about—the kind where you’re still breathing, still hoping, still setting the table… but somehow you’ve become optional.
I’m Debbie. I raised three kids—Denise, Carla, and Benjamin—mostly on my own. I worked, I worried, I showed up. I sat through fevers and school plays and heartbreaks. I clapped too loud because someone had to. And when they grew up, moved out, and got busy, my life didn’t matter the way theirs did.
I had eight grandchildren—Lily, Paige, Nara, Willow, Max, Jeremy, Josiah, and Joanna. Eight. And yet most holidays, I ate alone. One plate. One napkin. One candle in the window, like a silly little lighthouse for cars that never turned down my street.
On my seventieth birthday, I bought myself a small grocery-store cake and lit a single candle on my good china. I even said it out loud to the empty kitchen:
