As a designer, I had the tools. Caleb had the ideas. Together, we created a flyer promoting a fictional project: “Aunt Sheryl’s Shelter for Sick Pets – In Memory of Mama Eileen.” It painted her as a generous hero carrying out Mama E’s dream. We shared it across local communities—cafés, vet clinics, church boards. We even sent copies to her own mailbox.
The response was immediate. Aunt Sheryl wasn’t amused. She took to social media to deny everything, furious and overwhelmed. When she called Caleb demanding to know what we’d done, he simply said, “We’re just helping share your story. Isn’t that what you wanted?”
As it turns out, things didn’t end there. The buyer of Mama E’s house later reached out—angry over undisclosed repairs. Legal action followed. And an old acquaintance of Aunt Sheryl’s reappeared with financial expectations of his own. Soon after, both the car and Sheryl disappeared from town.
Meanwhile, Caleb and I got to work. We used the funds we would’ve spent on legal battles to create something small but real—Mama E’s Hope House. It’s not a full shelter yet, but we’ve already helped three senior dogs find loving homes. It’s a beginning, built on something true.
One night, I asked Caleb if we went too far. He shook his head with a quiet smile. “We just gave her a spotlight. What she did with it was up to her.”
Mama E believed in accountability with heart. And in the end, I think she’d be proud. Because while some people need courts, others just need a clear reflection of their own choices.