Is that it? I don't understand where it starts and when it ends.
this is the essay
I hate the letter 's'. Of the 164,777 words with 's' I only
[UWSL]grapple with one. To condemn an entire letter because of its use [/UWSL]
[UWSL]0.0006 per cent of the time sounds statistically absurd, but that [/UWSL]
[UWSL]one case [/UWSL][UWSL]changed 100 per cent of my life.[/UWSL][UWSL] [/UWSL]
[UWSL]I used to have two parents, but now I have one, and the 's' in [/UWSL]
[UWSL]'parents' isn't going anywhere. 'S' follows me. I can't get through [/UWSL]
[UWSL]a day without being reminded that while my friends went out to [/UWSL]
[UWSL]dinner with their parents, I[/UWSL][UWSL] [/UWSL][UWSL]ate with my parent.[/UWSL][UWSL] [/UWSL]
[UWSL]As I write this essay, there is a blue line under the word 'parent' [/UWSL]
[UWSL]telling me to check my grammar; even Grammarly assumes that I [/UWSL]
[UWSL]should have parents, but cancer doesn't listen to edit [/UWSL]
[UWSL]suggestions. I won't claim that my situation is [/UWSL][UWSL]as unique as one in [/UWSL]
[UWSL]164,777, but it is still an exception to the rule [/UWSL][UWSL]-[/UWSL][UWSL] [/UWSL][UWSL]an outlier. The [/UWSL]
[UWSL]world isn't meant for this special case.[/UWSL]