By LAURA HAMPSON
Tricia Somers was diagnosed with liver cancer last year. She knew she was going to die. She knew she didn’t have long.
Like any mother, Tricia’s first thought was for her son. Who would look after her 8-year-old son, Wesley, if she passed away?
Tricia’s a single mother and has no living family that could care for Wesley.
Little did she know, the answer was right in front of her. A beautiful human, a beautiful nurse called Tricia Seaman.
Somers had grown close to Seaman throughout the course of her treatment. They became friends; two women with the same name but very different fates.
“She came in and I just felt this overwhelming feeling of comfort,” Somers told ABC News affiliate WHTM-TV. “It was strange. I never had that feeling before and I thought she is going to take care of me. She is the one.”
On the day that Somers was meant to be discharged from the hospital, she decided her dying wish would be to ask Seaman if she would look after Wesley when she was gone.
“She said, ‘If I die will you raise my son?'” Seaman told ABC News.
“I didn’t know what to say in that moment. I told her I was flattered enough [that she] asked me. I said to her, ‘Why don’t you take a little time with this.’ … I was trying to be very diplomatic, everything in me said was saying ‘Yes I’ll do it.'”
Coincidentally, Seaman and her husband, Daniel, are the parents of three teenage girls and a 10-year-old son – and had just been approved to be adoptive parents. They had also started the process of becoming foster parents.