LITTLE Lennie Eyre has one big birthday wish this year – to open hundreds of cards.
It will be a special day for the terminally ill three-year-old, whose parents have been told nothing can be done to save him.
Brave Lennie was on the transplant list waiting for a new heart, but doctors now say surgery cannot be performed.
He is in Birmingham Children’s Hospital but could go into cardiac arrest at any moment.
Lennie’s family now want to create as many memories as possible and are appealing for Sunday People readers to send him cards for his big day on August 16.
Mum Laura has already been overwhelmed with the response after a children’s charity put out an appeal.
This story is from the August 08, 2021 edition of Sunday People.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the August 08, 2021 edition of Sunday People.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
‘£500K A DAY' FOR PPE STUCK IN CHINA
AROUND £500,000 of taxpayer cash is being spent on storage space in China every day.
Kane's got eye on trophy life
NEVER TRY TELLING SILVERWARE-STARVED HARRY THE OLD CUP’S LOST HER LOOKS...
I WANT TO MAKE CAROLINE PROUD
OLLY ON RETURN AS HOST
Hero driver to meet family of mum he tried to save
Man tells how he ran over knife killer
AN ACT OF GORD!
Conflated answers Elliott’s prayers
Pandemic dogs crisis
ANIMAL charities are at breaking point as people dump puppies they got during the pandemic.
The hippo drone
HIP, hip hooray! These stunning aerial wildlife pics wowed the judges in a drone photo competition.
Hidden death toll of Afghan invasion
2,000 veteran suicides since 2001... 6 since fall of Kabul
‘US killed aid family'
A US drone strike targeting an ISIS suicide bomber in Kabul killed an innocent aid worker and his seven children, a report claims.
Bojo boat's ‘UK snub'
BORIS Johnson’s national flagship to showcase “the best of British” could be designed by foreigners.