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At a small Chicago clinic, an Alaska nurse called about my daughter and said, “Your son-in-law hasn’t been here.” I booked the first flight north without crying, and by dawn, his Bahamas honeymoon was no longer the worst thing I’d found. – News

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and dragging everyone else through it with me.”

That was how he worked.

Not by forbidding.

By making need look like vanity.

By making fear look childish.

By teaching her to apologize for wanting to live.

When she began chemo anyway—because one kind resident in Juneau had quietly taken her aside and said, very bluntly, that she should not let a healthy man continue reading …

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