Inheritance of Hope family member Kimberly Matthews-Hermans shares how she has experienced “jorrow”—joy in the midst of sorrow—while facing the terminal illnesss and loss of her husband Jasan.
I put the coffee on.

Being with a spouse with a terminal diagnosis can be like that. For me, one day I was going along thinking that I was self-sufficient, and then after a short amount of time, I realized how much I needed other people. I learned that walking this ALS journey is literally impossible without a tribe. Magnified 1000 fold for the person with the diagnosis, I would suppose. Inheritance of Hope became part of that tribe for Jasan and I. The Friday Morning Gathering group became the friends and family that held us up, and that we held up. This is where “jorrow” was born. We marvelled, how could we, who were all experiencing a terminal diagnosis of a loved one, or a diagnosis ourselves, walking through the valley of the shadow of death, still laugh and cry tears of joy, and navigate all the sorrow? “Jorrow” is the only way. It IS possible to hold space for both in your life. In fact, I think it is imperative.