After 88 Times of Being Forgotten
540 Views · Ongoing · Joy Brown
I donated a kidney to my adopted sister.
Seven days later, I lay on the cold hospital bed, listening to my fiancé and family laughing down the hall.
They were popping champagne to celebrate my adopted sister's discharge.
No one remembered I had just had surgery. No one remembered my nut allergy.
When someone handed me a plate of almonds, I smiled.
I shoved them into my mouth, handful after handful, and swallowed them down. Then I told them I was done fighting for their love.
My fiancé demanded I postpone our wedding. My brother beat me until I bled and locked me on the rooftop to die.
After being abandoned eighty-eight times, I finally learned how to love myself—by cutting everyone who failed me out of my life.
Seven days later, I lay on the cold hospital bed, listening to my fiancé and family laughing down the hall.
They were popping champagne to celebrate my adopted sister's discharge.
No one remembered I had just had surgery. No one remembered my nut allergy.
When someone handed me a plate of almonds, I smiled.
I shoved them into my mouth, handful after handful, and swallowed them down. Then I told them I was done fighting for their love.
My fiancé demanded I postpone our wedding. My brother beat me until I bled and locked me on the rooftop to die.
After being abandoned eighty-eight times, I finally learned how to love myself—by cutting everyone who failed me out of my life.

















































