I love the vessel that Willow has chosen and it’s not super fragile which is great for carrying around! Willow was a lady from the late 1800’s and passed in the mid 1900’s. She was a housewife with 6 children. Her husband was a cruel gentleman but he provided well for the family. He had very high expectations of how Willow raised the children. Willow tells me her children started complaining of a man who always awoke them in the middle of the night. She did not believe the children and let this go on for sometime and did not inform her husband in fear of retaliation. Willow says things took a turn for the worse when the children would show signs of physical abuse on their bodies. When her husband questioned her she spoke of what the children told her. Naturally he did not believe her and wanted her to be put in a state home. He feared she would be violent towards other people in the community and reputation diminished. Willow started to believe maybe it was her who needed help. She does not speak much about her time at the state hospital. I do know she was treated very poorly and even had a prefrontal leucotomy on her brain to treat her supposedly illness. After this surgery Willow was brain dead. Sadly she lost her life to something that was not made up