My parents both died when I was just 11. No grandparents, no aunts or uncles — no one. Except my sister. She was only 20, a college sophomore with dreams and plans of her own, but the day our parents died, she packed up her dorm room, came home, and became my everything. She gave up her future so I could have one. She worked two jobs, kept our tiny house running, and loved me through every tantrum, every bad grade, every nightmare.

But when I turned 18 and finally left for college, something in me shifted. I wanted freedom — the kind I thought everyone else had. My sister called me every morning, every night. Checked if I’d eaten. Reminded me to sleep. And instead of appreciating her… I snapped.
“Stop calling! Get a life!” I told her one night when I was overwhelmed with classes. The silence on the other end should have warned me, but I hung up, pretending it didn’t matter.
She didn’t call again. For weeks.
I assumed she was mad. Maybe she needed space. I didn’t give it another thought.
Then spring break came. I went home expecting to find her cooking or watching TV. Instead… the front door was wide open, swaying slightly in the wind. My stomach dropped. Inside, the house looked like a ghost of itself — bare walls, missing furniture, boxes stacked in corners. My breath caught.

I ran to our neighbor’s house and knocked so hard my knuckles hurt. She opened the door with a look I’ll never forget — pity mixed with shock.
“You don’t know?” she whispered.
My world tilted.
She told me my sister had collapsed weeks earlier. She’d been feeling weak but ignored it until she couldn’t stand anymore. At the hospital, doctors diagnosed her with an autoimmune disease. Treatment was expensive — too expensive. So she sold our furniture, piece by piece, just to afford the medication that kept her alive. The neighbor had been helping her since.
I felt the air leave my lungs.

I sprinted to the hospital, tears blurring everything. When I saw her — pale, tired, but still my sister — I broke. I threw my arms around her and sobbed, “I’m so sorry. I’m here. I’m not leaving again.”
She smiled weakly and squeezed my hand.
She’s all I have in this world. And now I know… I almost lost her because of my own selfishness.
I just pray one day she can forgive me.
Source. brightside.me