For this particular project,Marie Clairespoke to the families of women killed in mass shootings.
In the video, the women left behind remember their mothers, daughters, and sisters.
They talk about the last time they saw them, and how they found out about the shootings.
And they share what life is like to be without them now.
Image Credit: Facebook/Marie Claire
Breaux was 21 years old and studying to be a radiology technician.
“I can just remember that night like it was yesterday,” Ali says.
“Every detail to it.”
“I thought, ‘She’s probably fine.
There are thousands of people there, and what are the chances?'”
“That was the day that my life stopped,” Jillian recalls.
“My mom’s life stopped.
And our whole world just came crashing down.”
The Reverend Sharon Risher shared memories about her mother, 70-year-old Ethel Lance.
“You’re never the same after that.
None of us are ever the same.”
It’s important for Mary Kay to keep her daughter’s legacy alive.
“you’ve got the option to name the mass shooters,” she says.
“But how many of us can name the victims?”
Watch the incrediblypowerful videobelow.
This content can also be viewed on the site itoriginatesfrom.