When my daughter first picked up a crochet hook, she was only nine years old. It started as a way to keep her hands busy after school, a quiet hobby that helped her unwind. At first, she made uneven scarves and lopsided squares that filled our living room with yarn scraps and laughter. I never imagined that three years later, that same hobby would become the center of a family crisis that shattered my trust and changed how I saw my own mother-in-law forever.
My daughter, Lily, is twelve now—soft-spoken, deeply sensitive, and endlessly thoughtful. She notices things other kids often overlook. One winter evening, we were watching a documentary about children in pediatric hospitals. There was a short segment showing kids going through chemotherapy, their heads bald beneath fluorescent lights. Lily didn’t say much during the program, but I noticed her eyes lingering on one particular girl wearing a thin cotton cap.
Later that night, as I tucked her into bed, she said quietly, “Mom… their heads must get so cold.”
