←back to thread

877 points thunderbong | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.22s | source
Show context
empathy_m ◴[] No.42162076[source]
Eric Meyer's posts about his daughter's illness, and the family's lifelong process of grieving afterward, are heartbreaking. It's arresting, gripping writing. It's wonderful and awful. Hug your loved ones tight. https://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/category/personal/rebecca...
replies(7): >>42162186 #>>42162216 #>>42162253 #>>42162428 #>>42162460 #>>42162521 #>>42163122 #
ericwood ◴[] No.42162428[source]
Thank you for linking this. I read bits and pieces of this as it was happening but it never fully registered for me at 24. I'm sitting here 10 years later at 34 having lost our son at 23 weeks. His due date was this past week. It's affected me in ways that still surprise, befuddle, and sometimes scare me. I cannot even begin to fathom what he's been through; the most recent blog post has me in tears.

I have really strong memories of learning HTML, CSS, and javascript in high school, and spending time in the school library picking apart css/edge. It felt like the dawn of a new era, I was in awe of the things I saw there. I built more than a few sites trying to get my head around the complexispiral demo, and spent countless hours diving into resources I found there (like A List Apart! I will never forget the suckerfish drop-downs). This is one of the few moments I have such vivid memories of that were directly responsible me for pursuing computer engineering and ultimately going so far into UI/UX and the web. I've never written it out this explicitly but: thank you for everything, Eric.

replies(6): >>42162492 #>>42162960 #>>42163100 #>>42163547 #>>42166145 #>>42167190 #
1. Cordiali ◴[] No.42162960[source]
I hope every day is a bit easier than the last for you.