When Morreen Branigan emailed his mother, “Did you come back alive? (Laughs)”, she sits on the handle of the car she still parked outside the house. I didn't know that I was dead.
“When she didn't reply, I didn't think well,” said a woman in Pennsylvania. People magazine About 52 -year -old mother Debbie. “It was not unusual for me to go home, sleep, and give me Facetime to make a plan for the morning. We spent every day together.”
Branigan, 30 years old, recently I shared her sad story with tiktokHe said his mother died of cardiac arrest on January 31, 2021 after several years of serious medical problems, including kidney disease.
Branigan's fiancee found Debbie in a parked car while a dog walk.
An ambulance was right next to her car.
“I immediately called my father at home,” explained. “I told him that I had to get here early. At this point I didn't know what was going on. The medical workers didn't tell us anything. We were at a loss.
“I think the reality has begun to see the reality after my father ran. The car was still stopped before, so we jumped on it and went to the hospital for an ambulance. It was only 3 minutes by car to the hospital. But when we were in the car, we knew what we were going to do.
Branigan had no brother and his mother was a best friend.
“I never imagined that when I sent that email, it would lead to her death,” she said.
This is not the first time Branigan said that they had shared such text exchanges.
“We made a joke more pathically,” she said.
“Anyone who knows us can be said to have been together every day,” said Branigan. “My mother embodies the softness and strength at the same time. There is no doubt that she was always in my corner. I wasn't scared of her, and she wasn't too heavy. She may not have done it, but she was there.
“She was the softest place to land,” she said.
Branigan's Tiktok produced 670,000 views and nearly 900 comments, but many of them were also from those who lost their parents.
“There are days when she cry, and she's still listening to my voice and returning her reply,” said Branigan. “I'm lonely because she's not there, including big and small things every day. I realize that I am doing so frequently – I want to deliver all news to her. Masu.”
The newspaper called some of the phone numbers related to Branigan, but could not ask her for comments.




