Terry Crews ("Brooklyn Nine-Nine") reads an essay by Brendan Halpin, about trying to find love again after loss.
Modern love.
The podcast is supported by produced by the Ilab at WBUR Boston.
From the New York Times and WBUR Boston.
This is modern love stories of love, loss, and redemption.
I'm your host, Meghna Chakrabarti.
How do you fall in love again after loss?
How do you deal with the complicated, conflicting emotions that come from grieving one person and also opening yourself up to loving someone else?
Thats what Brendan Halpin explores in his essay.
Its called dedicated to two women, only one of them alive.
It's read by Terry crews.
He stars in Brooklyn Nine Nine on NBC.
My wife is about to die.
As I leave the hospice to pick up our daughter at school, I tell Kirsten I love her.
She is bald, gaunt, jaundiced, and slipping in and out of consciousness.
It takes a lot of effort for her to speak.
I love you, I tell her, and she surfaces briefly and croaks.
I love you, too.
It's the last thing she will ever say to me.
I take our seven year old daughter Rowan from school to the hospice for a brief visit, and later that night, I go back alone and sit by Kirsten's bed with her parents and sister.
Kirsten is unconscious, rasping and moaning with every breath.