When older sister Holly was 9, she was adopted by a nurturing American couple with 9 other children, but she would often have nightmares and wake up in tears, saying “my daddy died, I have a sister, we need to find her.”
Holly’s mother contacted the orphanage, but found no records of a biological sister anywhere. Decades later, Holly’s husband contacted the orphanage again, and the results were the same. “But in my heart, I knew. I knew she was out there somewhere.”
“One of the patients told me there was another nurse named Meagan who was from Korea. She said you should talk to her, maybe you’re from the same town.”
They discovered many coincidences: born in Korea, missing family, “abandonment” listed on orphanage paperwork, adopted to Americans.
“I was like, this is too good to be true. I said we’ve got to do the DNA test, it’s the only way we’ll get the truth out of the whole thing.” The lab results came back, and the match was positive. “I’m like, this can’t be,” Holly recalls. “I was trembling, I was so excited, I was ecstatic.”
“I have this very strong belief that God must be …
Like, whatever I’ve done, I must’ve done something good in my life.”