Stories: You’re crazy to give $25,000 to some stranger

When my fifteen-year-old son, Ethan, died from heart disease, the world didn’t just feel quiet—it felt empty.

Hospital visits had been our routine for years. Tests, treatments, long nights in stiff chairs beside his bed. Through it all, one person was always there besides me.

Daniel.

Daniel was Ethan’s best friend. They met in middle school and were inseparable after that. Even when Ethan got too sick to go out, Daniel would sit with him for hours—playing video games, watching movies, or just talking.

When Ethan passed away, I expected Daniel to drift away like most people eventually did.

But he didn’t.

He kept showing up.

Sometimes he brought groceries. Sometimes he fixed things around the house. Sometimes he just sat with me quietly when the silence became too heavy.

Daniel had his own struggles. His mom was raising him alone, working two jobs. He’d planned to go to college, but after graduation he stayed home to help support her.

Meanwhile, my own relatives were nowhere to be found. Too busy, they said. Too far away.

Months later, at a family dinner, my sister finally asked the question everyone had been whispering about.

“So what are you doing with Ethan’s college fund?”

It was about twenty-five thousand dollars we’d saved over the years.

“I’m giving it to Daniel,” I said calmly.

The room exploded.

“WHO?” my sister shouted.

My mother frowned sharply. “That money should go to your nephew!”

My uncle shook his head. “You’re crazy to give $25,000 to some stranger.”

I listened to them rant for a while before speaking.

“Daniel isn’t a stranger,” I said quietly. “He was the only person who stood by Ethan until the very end.”

No one had a response.

A few weeks later, I invited Daniel over.

He thought I just wanted help fixing the old fence again.

Instead, I handed him an envelope.

“What’s this?” he asked.

“Your future,” I said.

When he realized what it was, he stared at me in shock.

“I can’t take this,” he said quickly.

“Yes, you can,” I replied gently. “You loved my son when it mattered most. Ethan would want you to chase your dreams.”

Daniel’s eyes filled with tears.

Years later, I sat in the audience of a college graduation ceremony.

When Daniel walked across the stage to receive his degree, he scanned the crowd until his eyes found mine.

He smiled.

And in that moment, I felt something I hadn’t felt since Ethan was alive.

Pride.

Because even though I lost my son…

His kindness was still changing lives.

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