My uncle raised me after my parents died—after his funeral, I received a letter in his handwriting: “I’VE BEEN LYING TO YOU YOUR WHOLE LIFE.” I’m 26F, and I haven’t been able to walk since I was 4. That’s when the crash happened. My parents died that night. I survived… but my body was never the same. The state began discussing foster care, but my uncle stepped in and put a stop to it. “I’m taking her,” he said. “I’m not handing her to strangers. She’s my niece.” Ray didn’t seem like the gentle type, but to me, he was the safest person in the world. He tried to give me everything he could. He learned to do my makeup from videos so that I could feel pretty.👀 He took me to parks and fairs in my wheelchair, bought me sweet treats, and always found ways to make my world feel a little bigger. Then he got sick. At first, it was small things like forgetting his keys or needing to pause on the stairs to catch his breath. Then came the doctors talking quietly in the hallways, the paperwork, and finally hospice care. And then, just like that, HE WAS GONE. After the funeral, our neighbor came in with red eyes and shaking hands. “Ray asked me to give you this,” she whispered. “And to tell you… he’s sorry.” She placed an envelope in my lap. My name was written on it in his rough handwriting. My hands shook as I opened it, expecting some comfort or a goodbye. Instead, the first line made my stomach drop: “Hannah, I’ve been lying to you your whole life. I can’t stay silent anymore. I’VE CARRIED THIS SECRET FOR OVER 20 YEARS.

The machine started.

My muscles screamed. My knees buckled. The harness caught me.

“Again,” I said.

We went again.

***

Last week, for the first time since I was four, I stood with most of my weight on my own legs for a few seconds.

It wasn’t pretty. I shook. I cried.

Other days, I remember his rough hands under my shoulders, his terrible braids, his “you’re not less” speeches, and I think I’ve been forgiving him in pieces for years.

What I know is this: He didn’t run from what he did. He spent the rest of his life walking into it, one night alarm, one phone call, one sink-hair-wash at a time.

He couldn’t undo the crash. But he gave me love, stability, and now a door.

Maybe I’ll roll through it. Maybe one day I’ll walk.

Either way, he carried me as far as he could.

The rest is mine.

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