In 2006, the Desserich family were in the process of renovating their Cincinnati, Ohio, home when their five-year-old daughter, Elena, fell ill.
The little girl, who “loved art and dresses” and “always ate her vegetables first” began to slightly slur her words and started to have trouble walking.
After taking her to the emergency room, doctors originally told her parents, Keith and Brooke, that nothing was wrong. But after Elena’s paediatrician ordered an MRI, the family was given the worst possible news.
"A doctor entered her [hospital] room crying," dad Keith told The Mirror.
"Not fully understanding, we offered our condolences, only to have her tell us she was crying because of the news she was about to deliver."
Elena was diagnosed with Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG), a rare childhood brain tumour for which there is no cure.
She was given less than five months to live.
Nine months later, little Elena passed away in her bed. It was only then her family discovered the incredible gift she had left behind.
Over a nearly two-year period, Keith and Brooke found hundreds of notes the little girl had written for her family and her younger sister, Grace, to find after her death.
Elena had hidden the notes - which included drawings and messages like "I love you Mom, Dad and Grace" and "I'm worry I'm sick" - in drawers, between the pages of books, in the china cabinet and inside bags.
"After she lost her battle, slowly we started to put our lives and our house together. We found the first few notes and thought we'd forgotten about them," Keith, now 41, said.