My health declined (due to stress) and my children were still small and needed their mother. I left my job and quit school. I was able to be at the schools more with my children. I was able to be home with them when they were sick, and able to spend more time with them as a family. We had our own set of challenges during this time with my son not understanding why his younger sister did not have to spend as much time doing her homework as he had to spend on his. It is very hard when you have one child who has a learning disability and one child who is in all advanced classes. For once, I thought that our life had seen it’s share of hard times, we faced another obstacle. In 2012 my father-in-law was diagnosed with terminal colon cancer. He could not be cured, but hoped that chemotherapy could extend his time with us. In the spring of 2013 he improved. That is when I applied to the GRIT program at MTC and was accepted. I started classes that October. In December, my father-in-law was hospitalized. The cancer had spread and there was nothing that could be done. My classes dismissed for the Christmas break, and we brought