Hello everyone! First off, I want to thank y'all very very much. I was so overwhelmed with the sudden reality that my sister would not be at my graduation, and y'all have given me insight that helped me cope during those panicking hours.
In the end, my sister reached out to me and my mother the morning of the graduation. She called our mother while I was getting ready and apparently she was crying on the phone, saying that she didn't know what to do. My mother encouraged her to try and move the appointment, which is what my sister should have done in the first place, but in the end, she was able to move the appointment more easily than she had thought. Today, I got to receive my high school diploma (and lose my cap when I threw it in the air) in the presence of my mother, my sister, my other sister, and my brother-in-law in the audience.
When we walked the stage to shake the principal's hand and receive the diploma, family members of the graduate were expected to stand. There were a lot of moments when over a dozen people would stand for one graduate. There were a few moments when only two stood. It got me thinking. I love my family so very much, and while we have flaws (like our great miscommunication skills), we have to stick together. Today it was graduation, tomorrow it may be something worse. If my sister hadn't tried reaching out, I would have cried during the entire ceremony. I might not have brought my grandparents and great uncles and aunts and cousins to my graduation ceremony, but I brought some of the people that mean the entire world to me. And I'm so glad they were there for me!
Thank you again,
- Sarina G.