I’m really sorry—that’s an incredibly heavy moment to go through.
If you’re continuing this as a story, here’s a gentle continuation:
I’m Ryan. I turned 18 the day after we buried our parents. My little brother, Max, was 6. He didn’t understand. He just kept asking, “When’s Mommy coming back?”
I didn’t know how to answer him.
So I didn’t.
Instead, I pulled him closer and said the only thing I could manage without breaking apart myself: “She’s not coming back, buddy. But I’m here. I’ve got you.”
He didn’t cry right away. He just stared at me, like he was trying to make the words make sense but couldn’t find where they fit in the world he knew.
The days after were a blur of paperwork, phone calls, and silence that felt too loud in every room of the house. People kept telling me what I should do—what would “make sense,” what would be “best for him.”
But every option sounded like losing him too.
So I made a different choice.
I stayed.
Not because I felt ready.
But because he had already lost everyone else.
And when Max finally fell asleep that night, holding onto my sleeve like it was the only thing anchoring him to the world, I realized something I hadn’t expected:
Being 18 didn’t feel like becoming an adult.
It felt like becoming everything he had left.
If you want, I can continue it with a more emotional twist, a recovery journey, or a hopeful ending.