As my son Jamie, then 16, stood on top of the Empire State Building I felt a surge of joy. He looked like a child on Christmas morning, his excited gaze fixed on the New York skyline.
It was February 2020 and together with my partner Jem, then 44, we had taken Jamie and his brother Callum, then 19, to New York. Like most people we had enjoyed all the usual tourist sights, like Central Park, the Statue of Liberty and Bloomingdale’s department store.
But this view had captured Jamie’s heart and as I took a step towards him he turned and smiled. ‘This is brilliant, Mum. Can we come back?’
I laughed. ‘Of course, but you might not want your old mum tagging along with you next time.’
Towering over me, he wrapped an arm around my shoulders. ‘I’ll always want you around, Mum.’
This was typical Jamie. He had always been thoughtful and gentle and wasn’t embarrassed to admit how much he loved his mum. He’d even proved how wonderful he was when he signed up to the organ donor registry.
‘Are you sure about this?’ I had asked, spotting the online form on his laptop. Naturally, I was proud that Jamie was putting others first, but I’d wanted to ensure my son fully understood what giving away his organs meant.
Jamie had nodded, his face fixed on the screen. ‘If anything were to happen to me, I’d like my body to save people’s lives.’
Yet the idea of a life without Jamie was just unfathomable and I never for a second thought it would actually happen.
Esta historia es de la edición April 17, 2023 de WOMAN'S OWN.
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Esta historia es de la edición April 17, 2023 de WOMAN'S OWN.
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