When I was younger, my sister and I had a terrible fight. In anger, I told her, “I wish you were dead.” Later that same day, she died at just 19 years old. I was the last person to speak to her, and for the next nine years, those words haunted me. Not a single day passed without guilt, regret, and the painful belief that our final conversation would forever define our relationship.
Last week, while going through old boxes in my mother’s attic, I found my sister’s old phone. For reasons I still can’t explain, I turned it on. The battery somehow still had a little charge left. As I looked through it, I discovered a single unsent draft message written on the night she died.
The message read: “My little brother always says stuff he doesn’t mean when he’s mad. I do too lol. He’s actually the best thing in my life and I never tell him that. Gonna fix that tomorrow.” She never got the chance to send it, and she never got the chance to tell me those words in person. But finding that message changed everything I thought I knew about her final thoughts.
Since then, I’ve read those lines hundreds of times. Every time I do, it feels like she is speaking directly to me across the years, reminding me that she knew who I really was beyond one angry moment. I still carry sadness, but now I also carry something I didn’t have before: proof that she loved me, forgave me, and wanted me to stop punishing myself for words she never believed defined my heart.