I am continually amazed that I am still amazed at how different my perspective is from 98% of the world. :waitasec:
I know it is hard for some people to believe...but not all kids like to play outside.

My children do, but are only outside the hours my neighbors work and never unattended. I wouldn't be surprised if they have never seen them outside.
Moving around does not surprise me. It would be interesting to know if the places they moved got continually
less expensive? They may have had to keep downsizing due to the cost of Zahra's treatments. We moved several times from 2003-2006. Cheaper apartment, better job, closer to the doctors to use less gas...If we didn't we had to choose between life sustaining medication or having heat in the middle of winter.
Home schooling doesn't surprise me. The hearing loss may have factored into that. When you add all the school that would have been missed for 2 different cancer battles... If she also got sick easily and would again keep missing a lot of school...
Not all cancer survivors have the horrible, lingering fatigue... but alot of them do. She did have other lasting effects from treatment, hearing loss...so that makes it more likely she would also have lasting fatigue or other effects.
My best friend's son who beat Hodgkins sleeps 15 hours a day. They cut him to half days at school so he takes a 3 hour nap and is awake for dinner. If she did have lingering fatigue her sleeping until 2pm would not be odd to me. (I don't believe that story, but it isn't because I don't think she would sleep that long.)
I
really don't like the step mother's mug shot expression. I agree, I am going to wonder about drugs for now. It would make it easier to understand her hurting this little girl who fought so hard to stay alive.
I don't think Dad was involved.
Unfortunately I think this is going to be a
horribly tragic situation, right up there with Ethan Stacy and Shaniya Davis...because of what this child has
successfully battled, the people who
failed her and how
preventable this is going to turn out to be.