Talk:Protector/@comment-25464062-20141001011429/@comment-25464062-20141002134515

True enough. I hope that one day I'll be able, inthis lifetime, to see my sister as a strong young lady, but I try not to be terribly optimistic. I can be realistic to the point of harsh, sometimes. So, I apoligize in advance in case that comes out.

It is a very strong bond. Though, I was typically the one protecting my sister. Sometimes the Latina in her took over, though.... She was adorable. I think that you ar ejust meant to meet some people.

I'm sure that you will see your grandfather again, and I'm sorry for your loss in this lifetime.

Actually I knew a girl named Cassandra England. She had a genetic disorder called Epidermalysis Bullosa. Her skin cells had nothing connecting them and holding them in place. If you brushed her skin, it would have moved and ripped. Most babies with this disease die shortly after birth, and most of the survivors die a year or two later.

Cassie lived to the age of 16, and wa sone of the oldest survivors with her disorder. When she died, she did so in the hospital, because of the flu. The flu probably wouldn't have killed her if she hadn't had EB, but at the same time EB isn't what killed her.