Three-year-old Laya Thornton was not supposed to be on the Family Feud stage. She was supposed to be in the green room with her grandmother watching cartoons on a tablet while her mother, Rachel Thornton, played Fast Money for $20,000 that would cover the second round of IVF the Thornton family had been saving for for 14 mo
nths. At 3:47 p.m. on Thursday, November 13th, 2025, during what was supposed to be a quiet instudio interview segment, Steve Harvey was taping for a year-end Family Feud retrospective special. Laya Thornton pushed open a backstage door her grandmother had not realized was unlocked, walked across 47 feet of studio floor in pink sparkle sneakers and a unicorn dress.
stopped 4 feet in front of Steve Harvey’s interview chair, looked up at him with the serious, unguarded face of a small child, and asked one question that the 67year-old Steve Harvey had been trying to answer for 42 years. The boom operator caught her voice in perfect clarity. The second camera was already rolling. The interviewer sat frozen in his chair.
Steve Harvey, who had been about to deliver a polished answer to a polished question about his career philosophy, closed his mouth midword, looked down at the small girl in the unicorn dress, and broke into tears on camera for the first time in 16 years of hosting Family Feud. The question Laya Thornton asked was nine words long.
Mister, why are grown-ups sad when it’s not raining? It was Thursday, November 13th, 2025 at the Family Feud Studios in Atlanta, Georgia. The main taping of the day had ended at 2:30 p.m. The Thornton family from Charleston, South Carolina. Rachel Thornton, 34, a pediatric nurse. Her husband, Michael Thornton, 36, an elementary school music teacher.
Rachel’s mother, Patricia Coleman, 61, a retired dental hygienist. Michael’s sister, Diana Thornton, 32, a librarian. And Michael’s brother, Jacob Thornton, 29, a contractor, had lost the main game to the Ramos family from Albuquerque, New Mexico, by 34 points. The Thornton family had not advanced to fast money.
They had shaken hands, thanked the crew, and been escorted backstage to the green room, where Rachel’s mother, Patricia, was waiting with three-year-old Laya. The Thornton had been told they were free to leave the studio at their own pace. Rachel had sat down on the green room couch, still in her stage makeup, and had not spoken for 4 minutes.

She had not cried. She had simply sat there, her husband’s hand on her back, her mother holding Laya on the other side of the room, and had stared at a framed Steve Harvey publicity photograph on the green room wall without seeing it. After the main taping, Steve Harvey had changed into a charcoal gray cardigan and had moved to a different part of the studio for a separate sit-down interview being filmed for a year-end Family Feud retrospective special scheduled to air on December 28th, 2025.
The interviewer was a 44year-old CBS correspondent named Marcus Wellington. The interview was meant to run for 45 minutes. Two cameras were positioned. The audience was gone. The studio was nearly empty. Only 14 people, the interview crew, Steve’s assistant, Jasmine, two studio managers, and a backstage catering worker remained on the premises.
Marcus Wellington had just asked Steve Harvey his fourth question of the interview. Steve, after 16 years of hosting this show, what would you say is the thing you have learned most about what people are really carrying underneath the laughter? Steve Harvey had begun his answer with a polished sentence he had used in various forms many times before.
Marcus, the thing you learn is that everybody’s walking around with something nobody sees. That was when the door at the back of the studio opened. Patricia Coleman, Rachel’s mother, had left the green room at 3:44 p.m. to find a bathroom. She had not realized that when she had left, 3-year-old Laya had climbed down from the couch and had followed her grandmother’s footsteps down the hallway.
Patricia had closed the bathroom door behind her, thinking Laya was still on the couch with Rachel and Michael. Rachel and Michael had been in the lobby of the green room speaking quietly with a family feud producer about travel arrangements for the following morning. Laya had stood alone in the hallway for 90 seconds. She had seen a door at the end of the hallway that was slightly open.
She had walked toward it. She had pushed it. She had walked through. She had walked directly onto the family feud studio floor. The studio was quiet. The main lights had been dimmed. Two bright interview lights were focused on Steve Harvey and Marcus Wellington at the center of the set. Cameras were rolling.
The boom operator, a 44year-old woman named Delilah Mosley, was in her usual rafter position. Laya Thornton did not know that she was not supposed to be there. She did not know what cameras were. She only saw a tiredlooking man with a gentle face sitting in a big chair under a bright light. He looked sad to her. She walked toward him.
Marcus Wellington saw her first. He tried to signal the studio manager. The studio manager was already walking toward Laya quickly but quietly, not wanting to startle her. Steve Harvey saw her second. He held up one hand to the studio manager without turning his head. The studio manager stopped where she was.
Laya Thornton walked the full 47 ft across the studio floor in her pink sparkle sneakers. She stopped 4 feet in front of Steve Harvey’s interview chair. She looked up at him. Her small hands were folded together in front of her unicorn dress, the way her grandmother had taught her to fold them in church. She looked at him for a long moment, her small face serious and untroubled, the way a three-year-old looks at an adult before asking something important.
Then she asked her question, “Mister, why are grown-ups sad when it’s not raining?” Steve Harvey closed his mouth midword. The studio fell completely silent. Marcus Wellington looked at Steve. The two cameramen did not move. The studio manager stood frozen midstride. Delila Mosley in the rafters lowered her boom slightly without making a sound.
Jasmine Krenshaw, standing behind the interview lights, put one hand over her mouth. Steve Harvey did not speak for 14 seconds. Laya Thornton waited patiently. She did not repeat the question. She did not fill the silence. She simply stood there with her hands folded and waited for the tired man in the chair to answer her. Steve Harvey’s eyes filled.
He said very quietly, “Sweetheart, where did you come from?” Laya Thornton pointed vaguely behind her, “My mommy is sad because of the game.” Grandma is sad, too. Daddy is sad, but he’s pretending not to be sad so mommy won’t see. I don’t know why grown-ups are sad. It’s not raining. My mommy said when it rains sometimes people get sad.
But it’s sunny outside. I came to ask you. Steve Harvey looked at the small girl in the unicorn dress. Baby, what’s your name? Lla. I’m three and a half. Lla, where is your mommy? in the other room. She’s crying quiet so I won’t see. But I saw Steve Harvey reached out his hand very slowly and said, “Lila, come sit with me for a minute.
Is that all right with you?” Laya nodded. She walked the four feet to Steve Harvey’s interview chair. Steve lifted her gently onto his lap. She settled immediately, the way small children settle onto the laps of grandfathers. She looked at Marcus Wellington, who was also under the bright lights. She said, “Are you sad too, mister?” Marcus Wellington, who had a six-year-old daughter at home, could not answer. He nodded. His eyes filled.
Laya turned her attention back to Steve Harvey. She put one small hand flat on his chest, the way a three-year-old puts her hand on something to check if it is real. She said, “Your heart is loud.” Steve Harvey laughed. A broken wet laugh. Yes, baby. My heart is loud right now.
Why? Steve Harvey took a long breath. Because you asked me a question, sweetheart. A very important question, and I don’t have a good answer for it. Grown-ups get sad for a lot of reasons. Sometimes it’s raining outside, but a lot of the time, Laya, it’s raining inside. Inside the chest, inside the heart, even when the sun is out.
Do you understand that? Laya thought about it. She nodded seriously. My daddy has rain inside his chest sometimes when he thinks I’m sleeping. Steve Harvey closed his eyes. Marcus Wellington wiped his face with the back of his hand. The cameras kept rolling. No one had called cut. Steve Harvey opened his eyes.
He looked at the small girl on his lap. He said, “Lila, can you take me to your mommy?” Lla nodded. “She’s in the couch room.” Steve Harvey stood up carrying Laya on his hip with practiced ease. He had four grandchildren and the motion was automatic. He looked at the studio manager. Kesha, get Rachel Thornton. Bring her to the stage and the father and the grandmother now, please.
Kesha, the studio manager, nodded and walked quickly out the back door. Steve turned to Marcus Wellington. Marcus, I am going to need you to keep filming, but this is no longer my year-end interview. Is that all right with you? Marcus Wellington said, “Steve, I am at your service.” Steve Harvey walked Laya to the interview chair.
He sat down with her on his lap. He looked at the main camera, the cardigan, the bright lights, the three-year-old girl in the unicorn dress, the tired face of a 67year-old man. Rachel Thornton was walked into the studio at 3:51 p.m. She had not fixed her stage makeup. Her eyes were red. Michael Thornton walked in behind her, his arm around her shoulders.
Patricia Coleman walked in behind them, her hand pressed to her chest, her face pale with the particular terror of a grandmother who has just realized that her three-year-old granddaughter had not been in the green room where she had thought she was. Laya saw her mother. Laya said from Steve Harvey’s lap, “Mommy, I found a man.
” His heart is loud. Rachel Thornton stopped walking. She put her hand over her mouth. Steve Harvey smiled at Rachel gently. Mrs. Thornton, please come sit with me for a minute. Both of you, all three of you, please. Rachel Thornton in a days walked the 20 ft to the interview chairs. Michael walked with her.
Patricia followed, still shaking. Steve motioned to Marcus Wellington to move his chair. Two more chairs were brought. The family sat. Laya stayed on Steve Harvey’s lap. Steve Harvey spoke very gently. Mrs. Thornton, I am going to ask you something, and I want you to take your time. Your little girl came and found me during my interview just now.
She walked across 47 ft of empty studio by herself. and she asked me a question that stopped me cold. She asked me why grown-ups are sad when it’s not raining. She said her mommy was crying quietly so she wouldn’t see. She said her daddy has rain inside his chest when he thinks she is sleeping. Mrs.
Thornton, I don’t mean to pry, and you don’t have to tell me anything, but I have been sitting here for 14 years in this building, and I have never had a three-year-old girl walk onto my stage and ask me that question. Can you help me understand what she saw? Rachel Thornton began to cry. She cried the way a woman cries who has been holding something for 14 months.
She did not make a sound at first. Tears simply ran down her face. Michael Thornton put his arm around her shoulders. Patricia Coleman put her hand on Rachel’s knee. Rachel Thornton said in a voice that broke three times, “Mr. Harvey, Michael and I have been trying for another baby for 4 years. We have had three miscarriages. The last one was in June at 14 weeks, a little boy.
We were going to name him Samuel. We have been saving for IVF since September 2024. The first round did not work. We needed $18,000 for the second round. We were playing fast money today for that money. We lost by 34 points. I am 34 years old. Michael is 36. The clock is not on our side. Laya is Laya is Laya is our miracle.
She was our only baby who made it out of the womb. She has been asking for a brother or a sister for a year. We have not been able to give her one. And I have been I have been crying in the shower. I have been crying in the car. I have been crying quiet because she was only three and I did not want her to carry it. But she has been carrying it.
She has been watching me all along and I did not know. Rachel Thornton collapsed forward. Michael caught her. Patricia sobbed into her daughter’s shoulder. Laya Thornton, still on Steve Harvey’s lap, looked at her mother. Laya turned back to Steve Harvey. She said with the seriousness of a small child delivering a report, “See, mister, that’s why mommy’s sad.
The baby brother didn’t come.” Steve Harvey could not speak for 21 seconds. Then he said softly, “Baby, that’s exactly why your mommy is sad. You were right.” Laya nodded. She was satisfied. She had gotten her answer. Then she added with the unself-conscious clarity of a three-year-old who had been waiting a long time to say something.
But mommy doesn’t have to be sad because I can just tell the baby brother to come. Rachel Thornton lifted her head. What baby? Every night I tell him. I say, “Baby brother, come on. Mommy is sad. You need to come now.” I tell him every night, “Mommy, I’ve been telling him a long time. He just hasn’t come yet, but he’s going to come.
I know he is.” Rachel Thornton made a sound that was not quite a word. Michael Thornton put his hand over his face. Patricia Coleman wept. Steve Harvey held Llaya Thornton a little tighter and closed his eyes. The studio fell silent for the second time. Marcus Wellington, the CBS correspondent, had turned his chair away from the cameras at some point and was crying silently into his own hands.
He had not cried on set in 19 years of journalism. Steve Harvey opened his eyes. He did not look at a camera. He looked at Rachel Thornton. Mrs. Thornton, I am going to do something and I want your permission before I do it. Is that all right? Rachel nodded. I am going to make a phone call to a doctor I know, a good one, the best one, and I am going to ask him if he would be willing to take your case.
I am going to cover the cost of the next three rounds of IVF, whatever that cost is. Not because you lost the game, but because your three-year-old daughter walked across a studio floor and asked me a question that I could not answer. I have been asking that question myself for 42 years, and a three-year-old girl gave me the only real answer I have ever heard, which is, “Just tell the baby brother to come.
” Mrs. Thornton, I don’t know if your next baby is going to come, but I know that my job tonight is to make sure you have every possible chance. Is that all right with you? Rachel Thornton nodded. She could not speak. Steve Harvey turned to his assistant. Jasmine, get me Dr. Akinwale right now. Speaker.
Jasmine dialed. Three rings. A warm, deep voice came through the studio speakers. Steve, tell me. Dr. Akin, I am in my studio. I have a couple here. Rachel and Michael Thornton of Charleston, South Carolina. Rachel is 34. Michael is 36. They have been trying for a second child for four years. Three miscarriages.
Most recent was June of this year, 14 weeks. They have done one round of IVF, unsuccessful. They have been saving for round two. They have a three-year-old daughter named Laya. Dr. Akenwal, I want you to take them. Whatever it takes. Steve is paying. Dr. Dr. Olmad Akinwale, one of the country’s leading reproductive endocrinologists and the director of a fertility clinic in Atlanta, had been a close friend of Steve Harvey’s for 11 years.
He had personally helped two of Steve’s staff members through their own fertility journeys. He was silent for two seconds. Steve, put Rachel on. Rachel Thornton leaned toward the speaker. Rachel, my name is Dr. Olumid Akinwale. I am in Atlanta. I run a fertility clinic here. I want you to listen to me carefully.
I have a slot opening on Tuesday, November 18th, 9:00 a.m. I want you to come in. I want to meet you both. I want to run a full panel. Do not bring paperwork. Do not bring insurance information. Steve is covering everything. I want you to come in and let me take care of you. Can you do that, Rachel? Rachel Thornton, sobbing, said, “Yes, sir.
Yes, Rachel, one more thing. I want you to hear me. I have been doing this work for 19 years. I have walked with 600 couples through this door. I cannot promise you a baby. No doctor can. But I can promise you that from Tuesday forward, you will not be alone. You will not have to figure anything out by yourself.
You will have the best care available in this country and we will give the next baby every chance. Do you hear me? Rachel nodded. She couldn’t speak. Laya Thornton on Steve Harvey’s lap turned and looked at the speaker. She said loudly and clearly. Doctor, I’ve been telling him to come. He just hasn’t come yet, but he’s going to come.
Can you tell him to come faster? Dr. Akinwale was silent for a long moment. Then he said through a voice that was not steady, “Yes, Laya, I will tell him. Every morning when I come to work, I will tell him.” Steve Harvey turned to Rachel Thornton again. Mrs. Thornton, I want to ask you one more thing, and I want you to be honest with me.
When your daughter asked me that question, why are grown-ups sad when it’s not raining? I realized something. She has been watching you for a year. She has been watching you cry in the shower. She has been watching her daddy pretend not to be sad. She has been carrying something for you without you knowing. And I want you to hear me now. You are going to go home to Charleston tonight.
And the first thing you are going to do tomorrow morning is sit down with your three-year-old daughter at your kitchen table and you are going to tell her the truth. You are going to tell her that mommy has been sad because the baby brother is taking a long time. You are going to tell her that she does not have to carry it for you anymore.
You are going to tell her that grown-ups have rain inside sometimes and that it is not her job to hold an umbrella. Do you understand what I am telling you? Rachel Thornton nodded. She said, “Yes, Mr. Harvey.” “Yes, I will.” Steve Harvey looked at Michael Thornton. And you, Mr. Thornton, you are the dad.
You love your wife. I can see it. But I want to say something to you, too. Your three-year-old daughter knew that you have rain inside your chest when you think she is sleeping. She told me so. You have been carrying this for 14 months alongside your wife and you have been pretending for your daughter. Brother, you do not have to pretend anymore. She already sees you.
The damage you think you are preventing by hiding your tears. That damage is already done in a different direction. Your daughter is 3 and 1/2 years old and she is writing your grief down in her head. So you cry in front of her brother when you need to. You let her see. Because the worst thing you can do for a child is teach her that grown-up sadness is invisible.
The best thing you can do is teach her that grownup sadness is seen and that it passes and that it is safe to name. Michael Thornton put his face in his hands and cried openly for the first time on camera. Rachel pulled his head against her shoulder, but Steve wasn’t done. He turned to the main camera.
He was still holding Laya on his lap. She was playing with the button on his cardigan. He said into the lens very quietly, “Everybody watching this December when this airs, I want you to hear me.” “I was supposed to be sitting in this chair this afternoon to deliver a neat little speech about my career. I had a polished answer ready.
I was going to say something clever about what people are carrying underneath the laughter. But then a three-year-old girl walked across 47 ft of empty studio in a unicorn dress and asked me a question that I could not answer. And I want to say to every child watching this and every parent watching this, children see us.
They see us when we do not know they see us. They see the rain in our chests. They see us crying in the shower. They see us pretending. And they are not fooled. And they are not protected by the pretending. They are just left alone in it. So if you are a parent watching this tonight, do not pretend anymore. Sit with your child. Tell them.
Tell them the truth about the rain in language they can understand. Because a three-year-old taught me today that the kindest thing we can do for the people who love us is let them see what we carry and let them help us carry it. Even when they are small, Steve Harvey looked down at Laya Thornton, who had fallen asleep against his cardigan during his words.
He smiled, very tired, very quiet, especially when they are small. But Steve wasn’t done. He looked at Marcus Wellington. Marcus, this is not the interview we came to film today, but I want you to know. I want this to air. All of it. Because I need every parent out there to know what my three-year-old friend here taught me today.
Will you help me air this, brother?” Marcus Wellington nodded. He could not speak. 42 years ago, Steve Harvey had been living in his 1976 Ford Tempo. He said this into the camera gently without any of the performed weight of his usual version of the story. He said it as a quiet admission. He said, “I have told the story of the tempo for 40 years.
I told it every time I thought somebody needed to hear a promise I made. And every time I told it, I said that promise was about helping people. It was about being the stranger at the gas station for somebody else. And that was true. But today, I am telling you something I have not told anybody. The night I made that promise, I had written a letter, a goodbye letter. I was ready to mail it.
I did not mail it, but I wrote it. And I have never talked about that letter because I was embarrassed to have come that close. Laya asked me why grown-ups are sad when it is not raining. And I realized on this stage just now that the reason I have never talked about that letter is the same reason Rachel Thornton has been crying in the shower.
Because grown-ups are taught to hide rain. So I am telling the story differently tonight. 42 years ago, I was in a car. I was starving. I was 27. I wrote a goodbye letter. I was going to mail it. And an old man at a gas station walked up to me, handed me $5, and said, “God’s got a plan bigger than your pain.
” I thought he was a stranger. He was not. He was somebody somewhere who had already figured out that grown-ups have rain inside their chests. and he looked at me and he saw mine. Laya Thornton, your three-year-old daughter. She is the stranger at the gas station tonight. For me, for you, for everybody who watches this, she saw rain that nobody thought she could see.
And I want everybody watching to know if a three-year-old girl can see your rain, you are not hiding it. You are just standing in it alone. Steve Harvey stopped speaking. Laya Thornton stirred against his cardigan. She opened her eyes briefly. She said sleepily, “Mister, did you tell the baby brother to come?” Steve Harvey smiled.
“Yes, baby.” I told him. Laya nodded. She closed her eyes again. She fell asleep. The episode aired on December 28th, 2025 as a 41 minute CBS special titled The Question a Three-year-old Asked. Marcus Wellington had cut nothing. The full interview, the full walk-in, the full exchange, Steve’s phone call, Laya asking the doctor to tell the baby brother to come faster, Steve’s story about the goodbye letter, all of it aired.
Within 40 hours, the clip of Laya Thornton saying, “Mister, why are grown-ups sad when it’s not raining?” had been shared 8.3 million times. Within 19 days, the full special had been viewed 540 million times across every major platform. The hashtag rain in the chest trended worldwide for 21 consecutive days. Parents across the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, Brazil, and South Africa posted handwritten notes they had written to their young children, explaining in simple age appropriate language that grown-ups have
sadness, too, and that it is not the child’s job to fix it or hide from it. The phrase rain in the chest became within 3 weeks a widely used metaphor in child and adolescent mental health communities. Steve Harvey launched the Rain Foundation on January 19th, 2026, seated with $7 million of his own money. The foundation’s mission was narrow and specific.
It funded mental health services, fertility care, and family counseling for parents of young children ages 0 to 7 who had experienced pregnancy loss, infertility, or grief related depression that their young children had witnessed. The foundation provided not only care for the parents, but also age appropriate counseling resources specifically designed to help young children understand and name what they had been quietly observing at home.
In its first year, the foundation served 418 families across 34 states. By the end of its second year, that number grew to 1,647 families across all 50 states and four Canadian provinces. Every approval letter from the foundation closed with a line Thornton had said in the studio, “The rain is not your fault, and it will pass.
” Rachel and Michael Thornton began their second round of IVF with Dr. Akin Walle on December 2nd, 2025. The egg retrieval procedure took place on December 15th. Eight viable embryos were fertilized. On January 8th, 2026, a single healthy embryo was transferred. On February 1st, 2026, Rachel Thornton received a positive pregnancy test.
On October 14th, 2026 at 7:42 a.m. at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, Rachel Thornton gave birth to a healthy baby boy. He weighed 7 lb 11 oz. They named him Samuel, the name they had chosen for the baby they had lost in June of 2025. His middle name was Steven after Steve Harvey.
Laya Thornton, four years old by then, sat beside her mother’s hospital bed that morning and held her baby brother for the first time. She looked up at her mother and said with the serious unguarded face of a small child, “I told you he was going to come, Mommy.” Rachel Thornton wept. In a follow-up interview with Marcus Wellington 16 months after the events in the studio, Steve Harvey was asked what he thought had happened in the 14 seconds after Llaya Thornton first asked her question.
Steve Harvey took a long time to answer. Marcus, I think in those 14 seconds I was a three-year-old boy again in Welch, West Virginia in a kitchen with my mama at the sink. She was crying. She did not know I saw her. I was standing in the hallway and I walked up to her and I tugged on her apron and I asked her why she was crying and she knelt down and she wiped her face on her apron and she told me a lie.
She told me she was just cutting onions. But there were no onions, Marcus. There was no stove on. There was nothing cut. I was three. I knew she was lying. I walked back into the hallway and I did not ask her again. And I carried that for 62 years before Llaya Thornton walked across a studio floor and asked me the question I had wanted to ask my mother back.
Laya did what I could not do. And in those 14 seconds, I was being asked what I had wanted to be asked by my three-year-old self in that kitchen in 1961. So, I cried because the three-year-old in me had finally been heard. Two years after the taping, a reporter from the Atlanta Journal Constitution visited the Harvey family home for a profile piece on the foundation’s second anniversary.
Steve Harvey was in the kitchen with his wife Marjgerie and his two adopted children, Desmond and Kiara, who were making dinner together. A small framed drawing hung on the refrigerator. It had been drawn in crayon by Llaya Thornton, age 4, in November 2026, one month after the birth of her baby brother, Samuel.
The drawing showed five figures, a mommy, a daddy, a big sister, a baby brother, and a tall man in a gray cardigan. Above all five figures was a drawn son. In the corner of the drawing, in a child’s wobbly handwriting, Laya had written one sentence, “No more rain.” Steve Harvey had carried the drawing in his wallet for a full year before Marjgerie had laminated it and put it on the refrigerator.
Every December 28th, the anniversary of the interview airing, the Thornton family drove from Charleston to Atlanta for a visit with the Harveys. Laya by her fth birthday had begun calling Steve Harvey Grandpa Steve. Samuel by age two had learned to do the same. Rachel Thornton and Marjgerie Harvey had become friends who spoke on the phone every other week.
Michael Thornon had taught Steve Harvey’s adopted son Desmond how to play the trumpet, which had been Michael’s own musical instrument since the age of nine. And every night in the Thornon household in Charleston before bed, Laya Thornton, now 5 years old, knelt beside her little brother Samuel’s crib and said her own version of a nightly prayer.
She told him in the serious voice of a big sister, “Sam, don’t go nowhere. Okay, stay. Mommy gets sad if you go.” Then she kissed his forehead, and she went to her own room. And she slept the deep, easy sleep of a child who had once asked a grown man a question that had stopped the world and had gotten an answer, and had watched her family come back together because she had been brave enough to ask.
Some questions are too big for grown-ups. Some questions wait 60 years to be asked. And some three-year-old girls in unicorn dresses on a quiet Thursday afternoon in November walk 47 ft across an empty studio floor and ask the question that finally lets the rain in every chest come out into the open where it can finally dry.
If this story moved you, do one thing tonight. Look at the child in your life. your own, your grandchild, your niece, your neighbor’s kid, the one who has been quiet lately, who has been watching you, who has been too careful. Sit down with them at their height and tell them the truth about your own reign in small words.
Tell them it is not their fault. Tell them it will pass. Tell them you are glad they see you. Because the kindest thing any of us can do for a small child is let her know that her brave question was heard. Then hit subscribe because next week there is another story somebody out there needs to