
Minnesota Mom Posts Old Photo of Murdered Daughter, Brooke Bongo, and Asks Strangers to Help Her See What She Would Look Like at 34
Julie Bongo-Opatz never stops counting the years. Yesterday, she turned to a Facebook group with a simple, heartbreaking request: could someone help her see what her daughter Brooke might look like today?
Brooke was violently murdered just two months after the photo Julie shared with the group. Tomorrow, she would have turned 34.
“Mom’s hurt for more than just a few years,” Julie wrote, in a message that stopped scrollers in their tracks and drew hundreds of responses from strangers who felt the weight of those words immediately.
The photo she shared captures Brooke young and alive, frozen at the age she would always be in her mother’s albums.
For Julie, every birthday that passes is both a milestone and a wound reopened. There is no moving on, only moving through, and some days even that feels impossible.
What happened next in the comments section showed something quietly beautiful about the internet in its better days. Strangers did not scroll past. They stopped, they typed, and they showed up in the only way they could from behind a screen.
Strangers Stepped In With Kindness and Technology
Tiffany LaPlante was among the first to respond with action. She used an AI aging tool and shared a generated image of what Brooke might look like at 34, writing that she was so sorry for the loss and that she could not begin to imagine the pain. She sent love and light along with it.
Others poured in with words when they had nothing else to offer. Jackie Ratcliffe told Julie that Brooke would be close by while she grows in heaven. VibrantBlueberry3107 wrote that Brooke would have been a beautiful woman.
Glei Apolinario simply sent hugs and comfort. Danielle Fausz-O’Brien shared something of her own without being asked, adding to the growing pile of gestures from people who wanted to do something, anything, to ease a pain they could not fix.
Then came a comment that hit differently. A woman named Brooke Leighanne Dickerson-Jereb wrote that she shares the name and was about to turn 26 herself the following day. She promised to blow her birthday candles out with Brooke in mind. In a thread full of grief, that small act of connection felt like a window opening.
By the time the post reached 729 comments and counting, it had become something larger than a single mother’s request. It became a gathering place for people who understood, even distantly, what it means to love someone you can no longer hold.
Julie’s post does not ask for pity. It asks for presence. She wants to see her daughter’s face aged by time, softened or sharpened by years that never came.
She wants to imagine Brooke at 34, maybe laughing at something, maybe tired from work, maybe calling home on a Tuesday for no reason at all.
That is what grief looks like this many years later. Not dramatic. Just a mother on the internet, asking strangers to help her see her child one more time.
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