Have you ever looked at a hospital bill and felt your heart physically stop? Not because of the diagnosis, but because of the price tag attached to your child’s life?
I was standing in my kitchen, the late afternoon sun highlighting the layers of dust I was too tired to clean. On the table sat a stack of white envelopes—the kind that don’t bring cards or invitations, only demands.
My daughter, Lily, was six years old, and she was born with a heart that didn’t know how to beat in rhythm. We had already been through two surgeries. The third one, the one the specialists called “the final corrective,” carried a price tag of eighty thousand dollars.
I was working three jobs and drowning. Every time I looked at Lily—seeing her pale skin against the hospital sheets, smelling that sterile, metallic tang of the pediatric ward—I felt like a failure. I was her father. I was supposed to be her shield. Instead, I was a man watching his bank account dwindle to double digits while her life depended on a deposit I couldn’t make.
