This is a story of the immense love between a mother and a daughter, about the bond they share in the face of overwhelming challenges, about how we cope with grief and loss — and how we choose to spend the time we have together.
Beth Rigsbee was 18 months old when she had her first seizure. By age 5, she was experiencing 60 a week — including episodes that forced her to wear a helmet to prevent her from hurting herself. “It was like an invisible person would just slam her to the floor,” her mother, Cindy West Rigsbee, remembers.
Neurologists diagnosed Beth with Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome, a rare form of epilepsy that accounts for just 2-5% of childhood epilepsy cases. The intensity of Beth’s seizures left lasting impacts. Now 47, she has required full-time care for her entire life. Cindy has been Beth’s primary caregiver.
In January 2023, Cindy was diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer. For the first time, Cindy had to consider what Beth’s life will look like after her death.
Cindy continues to care for Beth at their home in Durham, N.C., “preparing for the worst but hoping for the best.” She works to arrange care for a future for Beth without her in it, while hoping that this uncertain future is still far away.
Beth gets ready for a horseback riding lesson at Bright Star Stables in Rougemont, N.C. on June 25, 2023. Beth has participated in the Special Olympics Horseback Riding program for more than 20 years. "Parents are always telling their children what to do, when to do it, what not to do," Cindy said. "But when she rides that horse, she's telling that horse that she loves, 'walk, trot, turn to the right, turn to the left.' So she is telling something what to do, not somebody telling her what to do."
Anna Connors












