I believed in what I could see and measure and explain. That was my world. Pulse rates and oxygen saturation and the precise sequence of actions that gives a person’s body a fighting chance. That was my religion, if I’m being honest. What I’m about to tell you happened in September and October of 2006. I was 31 years old.
I had been working as a paramedic in Milan for about 3 years at that point, and I was good at my job, cool under pressure, methodical. The other guys on the team used to say that Marcus Webb doesn’t rattle, and I wore that like a badge. It felt like identity, like proof that I was built different, that I had something the average person didn’t have.
This capacity to stay completely detached from the emotional weight of the situations I walked into every day. What I didn’t know, what I wouldn’t let myself know, was that all of that detachment had quietly emptied me out. I had a son named Daniel. He was 6 years old in the fall of 2006, and I was so proud of him in that distant performative way that men sometimes have when they haven’t learned how to actually sit with another person and be present.
I would show up to his soccer games and stand on the sideline and clap at the right moments and feel like I was doing my part, but I wasn’t really there. Not in the way a child needs a father to be there. My wife, Elena, had started saying things to me at night, quietly, not accusatory, just sad. She would say, “Marcus, where are you?” And I would look at her and say, “I’m right here.
I’m standing right in front of you.” And she would nod and look away. Because that was exactly the problem. So, that was me. That was my life in September 2006. Competent and hollow, proud and absent, moving through days like they were procedures to be executed rather than moments to be inhabited. The first time I transported Carlo Acutis, I didn’t know who he was.
I just knew what the dispatch told me. 15-year-old male, severe fatigue and weakness, suspected acute leukemia, non-emergency transport from the family’s apartment in Milan to the Monza hospital. I remember the day was cool, one of those early autumn afternoons in Milan where the light has that particular quality, golden and horizontal, coming through everything sideways, making even the ordinary streets look like a painting.
My partner that day was a man named Bruno Ferretti, who I’d worked with for 2 years. We were the kind of colleagues who trusted each other without needing to talk about it. We went up to the apartment. The mother answered the door. Her name was Antonia, and I remember thinking she had the face of someone who had been crying for a long time and had made peace with it.
She led us to a room at the end of the hall. And there was Carlo. He was sitting on the edge of his bed, dressed in jeans and a gray sweatshirt with sneakers that were just a little too new to have been worn much. He had a laptop open on the desk behind him, and there were papers spread everywhere, printouts, photographs, notes in a small, dense handwriting. He was thin.
You could see it in his face, the way illness reveals the structure underneath, but his eyes were completely alert, completely alive, with a quality of attention that I genuinely had not encountered in a 15-year-old before. He looked at me like he was deciding something. Not sizing me up.
That’s not the right description. More like he was determining how honest to be. I introduced myself. I told him we were going to get him to the hospital, and that everything was going to be fine, which is the professional default, the thing you say regardless of what you actually think. He nodded. He said in Italian, “Yes, I know you’re going to take good care of me.
” And then he said something that I didn’t process immediately, because it wasn’t part of the sequence I was running. He said, “How is your boy doing with soccer?” I stopped. I looked at him. I said, “Sorry.” He said, “Your son.” The one who plays on the junior team on Saturday mornings. Is he getting better at headers? I remember the physical sensation of that moment.
It was like stepping through a trapdoor. Not fear, exactly. More like the ground becoming suddenly unreliable. I had never met this kid before. I had told nobody on that call anything about my personal life. My son played Saturday morning soccer at a small community pitch in the Navigli district, and the only people who knew about it were Elena and a couple of our neighbors.
I said very carefully, “How do you know I have a son?” And Carlo just smiled. Not a strange smile, not a knowing smile in a theatrical way. Just warm. He said, “I don’t know why certain things come to me. They just do. I ask God to show me what I need to see, and sometimes he shows me more than I ask for.
Your boy is going to be fine, more than fine. But, he needs you to stop watching from the sideline.” Bruno looked at me. I looked at Bruno. Neither of us said anything. We transported Carlo to Monza. The drive took about 40 minutes in the afternoon traffic, and for most of it I was just doing my job, monitoring his vitals, communicating with the receiving team, making the 10,000 small adjustments that transport requires.![]()
But Carlo was talking the whole time. Not about himself, not about what was happening to him. He asked me about America, about what made me come to Italy, about what Elena was like when we first met. He talked about his website. He had built this entire online database of Eucharistic miracles, cases from all over the world, documented and categorized with the precision of someone who genuinely loved data.
He said he’d been working on it for years, and he wanted to make sure it stayed up after he was gone. He said that so naturally, after he was gone, like it was simply part of the landscape of facts he was navigating. I said, “You’re going to be fine.” And I meant it in the way you mean things when you don’t want to think too carefully about what you’re saying.
And he looked at me with those absolutely clear eyes and said, “Marcus, it’s okay. I know what’s happening, and I’m not afraid.” I’m going to pause here for just a second because I want to say something directly to you. This channel doesn’t receive any revenue from YouTube. Everything you watch here, every story, every testimony, every word, is produced with love and funded entirely by this community.
If what you’ve heard so far has already moved something in you, if Marcus’s story is speaking to a place inside you that you recognize, you can help keep this mission alive. The link is in the first pinned comment. Even the smallest contribution means more than you can imagine. And if right now is not your moment for that, that is completely okay. No pressure, no strings.
Now, let me tell you what happened next, because this is where the story gets impossible. We arrived at Monza. The receiving team took over. I handed off my report, said goodbye to Carlo. He shook my hand and held it for just a second longer than a handshake requires, looked me in the eyes and said, “Tell Daniel I said good luck Saturday.
” And then he was gone. Through the doors into the hospital, and I stood there in the parking lot with Bruno, and Bruno looked at me and said, “What was that about?” And I said, “I have absolutely no idea.” Now, I want to tell you what I didn’t do. I didn’t go home and have some conversion experience. I didn’t suddenly become religious.
What I did was exactly what I always did when something didn’t fit my categories. I minimized it. I told myself he must have overheard something. I told myself it was a coincidence. I told myself that kids with serious illnesses sometimes develop an unusual attentiveness to people around them, a kind of hyper-awareness, and that explained what he seemed to know about me.
I told myself a hundred reasonable-sounding things, and I went home that evening, and I did not stop at the sideline of my life, and I did not sit with my son on the floor, and I did not tell Elena what had happened. I made dinner. I watched the news. I went to bed. But something had shifted. Something small, like a hairline crack in a wall that you notice once and can’t stop noticing afterward.
Because he had said Daniel’s name. He had said Daniel’s name without me ever saying it. Two weeks later, we got the call again. Not an emergency, another transport. Carlo had been discharged for a short window and was being brought back for further the treatment. This time it was just me.
Bruno had a different rotation, and I had a new partner named Stefano who didn’t talk much. Carlo looked thinner than before, but when I walked into that room, the first thing he did was ask if Daniel had a good game on Saturday. I sat down on the edge of his desk chair without being invited to, and I said, “Carlo, how do you know these things?” And he said, quite simply, “I pray for you.
I have been praying for you since the first time we met. I asked for your name after you left, and I’ve been asking God to show me what to pray for. He paused, then said, “Is it okay if I tell you something?” I said, “Yes.” He said, “You are going to face a moment in about 30 days where you have a choice to make, and I don’t mean a dramatic choice.
I don’t mean something you’ll see coming. It’ll look like nothing, but it’s the most important thing you will do. And when you’re standing in that moment, you’ll know. And whatever you do, choose your son.” I said, “Carlo, what does that mean?” He said, “You’ll know.” And then he said something that I have never forgotten, that I have repeated to myself approximately a thousand times in the 17 years since it happened.
He said, “God doesn’t need you to be religious, Marcus. He needs you to be present.” 30 days. He had said 30 days. I remembered that precisely because it was such a specific number, not someday, not eventually, 30 days. The third time I saw Carlo Acutis was October 7th, 2006. It was an emergency call. He had taken a serious turn, and I knew when I walked into that hospital room to assist with the transport to the ICU that we were in different territory now.
He was weak in a way that the body announces clearly to anyone who has seen it enough times. His eyes were still the same, that complete undiluted alertness, but the body holding them was losing the fight. We didn’t talk much during that transport. He was exhausted. But at one point, just as we were pulling into the hospital bay, he reached out and put his hand on my arm.
He said, and his voice was quiet, measured, like someone being careful with their remaining energy, he said, “Marcus, my mother lost her rosary. She’s been looking for it for 2 weeks, and it’s making her very sad because it belonged to her mother. Tell her it’s under the left side of the bed. She needs to look all the way to the back against the wall.
I said, “You want me to tell your mother where her rosary is?” He said, “Yes. Will you do that for me?” I said, “Yes.” Of course I said yes. What do you say to a 15-year-old boy in that condition who asks you to deliver a message to his mother? He said, “Thank you.” And then he closed his eyes. Carlo Acutis died on October 12th, 2006.
I was not on duty that day. I found out from a colleague who had been on the transport team. I sat in my kitchen that evening and I felt something that I had not felt in a long time, a crack of genuine grief, not professional, not detached, actual grief. The kind that arrives when someone who was briefly, inexplicably important to you leaves.
And then I remembered the rosary and the 30 days. The 30 days would end on October 16th. I went to see Antonia Acutis the day after Carlo’s funeral. I had no professional reason to be there. I simply went. I knocked on the door of the same apartment I had been to in September. And when she opened the door, this woman who had just buried her son, I told her who I was.
She remembered me. She invited me in, made tea, moved with the slow deliberateness of someone in the middle of a grief so large there’s no rushing through it. I told her what Carlo had said. I told her about the rosary. I told her he had said it was under the left side of the bed, all the way to the back against the wall. She went still.
She put down her cup. She said very quietly, “Which bed?” I said, “I only know what he told me. Under the left side of the bed against the wall.” She stood up. I followed her to Carlo’s room. She knelt down on the left side of his bed, reached under it, and pushed her arm all the way back to where the bed frame met the wall and she made a sound that I will hear for the rest of my life.
Not loud, just this quiet broken exhale. She pulled out a white rosary, small with blue beads, obviously old, the kind of object that has absorbed decades of hands holding it. She sat back on her heels on the floor of her dead son’s room and she held that rosary to her chest and she wept. She told me later, when she could speak again, that her mother, Carlo’s grandmother, had given her that rosary before she died, 20 years before.
That it had been missing for 3 weeks. That she had turned the apartment upside down looking for it. That she had never mentioned it to Carlo because she hadn’t wanted to worry him while he was in the hospital. He had known. He had known about a rosary that his dying mother hadn’t told him about in a room he hadn’t been in for weeks, located at a specific spot, the left side of the bed against the wall.
That he had no physical way of knowing. Hey, I want to pause for just a second here before I go on and I promise you the story is not over, there’s more coming. I am so genuinely curious where you are watching this from. Drop your city or country in the comments. Seriously, I love reading those.
It never gets old to me to see how far these stories travel, how many different places people are watching from and feeling the exact same things. And if this story is landing somewhere real for you, please subscribe if you haven’t already. It helps me more than I can explain to keep sharing these testimonies. Okay. Back to October 2006.
The 30 days. October 16th was 5 days after Carlo died, 4 days after the funeral, 1 day after I sat in Antonia’s apartment watching her find a rosary that her son had known about from a hospital bed. And I still didn’t fully understand what the 30 days meant. What choice was I supposed to make? What was the moment I would recognize? October 16th was a Monday.
I had a day shift. It was ordinary. A standard run in the morning, paperwork, lunch at the small place around the corner from the station that Bruno and I always went to. Normal. I drove home. I parked the car. I walked up the stairs to our apartment. And when I opened the door, I heard it before I saw it. Daniel crying.
Not hurt crying. Not angry crying. The specific sound of a child who has been trying to hold something together and can’t anymore. I walked into the living room and he was sitting on the floor next to the coffee table with a picture in his hands. It was a drawing he had made. I could see it from the doorway.
A drawing of the four of us. Me and Elena and him and our dog. A red and blue crayon thing that he had made probably a year ago. And he was crying over it. Elena was in the kitchen. She hadn’t heard me come in. Daniel looked up at me and his face did the thing children’s faces do when relief and sadness arrive at the same time.
It crumpled completely. He said, “Papa.” I haven’t called you anything in years. I’m still not sure why he said “Papa” instead of “Dad”. He said, “Papa, do you love us?” And there it was. That was the moment. That was the nothing that was everything. I could have done what I always did. Reassured him officially.
Said, “Of course I do, buddy.” In that hearty, slightly deflecting way that closes the conversation. I could have been good at it. I could have managed the situation. Instead, I sat down on the floor next to him. Right there on the living room floor in my work clothes with my bag still on my shoulder.
I sat down next to my 6-year-old son and I put my arm around him and I said, “Yes. I love you more than anything in the world and I’m sorry I haven’t been here the way I should have been. And I’m going to do better starting today.” He leaned into me. That’s all. He just leaned in. Elena came out of the kitchen and saw us on the floor and stopped.
She didn’t say anything for a moment. Then she sat down, too, on the other side of Daniel, and we just sat there, the three of us on the living room floor, for a long time. It wasn’t dramatic. Nobody said anything particularly profound, but something that had been quietly breaking for years stopped breaking in that moment and began slowly and imperfectly and for real to be repaired.
I need to tell you what I found out 6 months later because this is the part where I still lose sleep sometimes just thinking about it. In April of 2007, Antonia Acutis reached out to me. She said she had been going through Carlos’ computer, his laptop, the one that was always on his desk, and she had found something she wanted me to see.
I went back to the apartment. She opened the laptop and showed me a document. It was a text file, not formatted, just plain text, dated September 14th, 2006. The same week as my first transport. It was a list of names. 15 names, first and last, with brief notes next to each. Near the bottom of the list, next to a name I recognized as my own, was written in Italian, “Paramedic Milan, son named Daniel, needs to come down from the wall before October 16th.
Needs to come down from the wall before October 16th.” He had written it on September 14th, 32 days before October 16th, 4 weeks before he died. He had been praying for 15 specific people, had been tracking what he felt called to pray for, and he had written down, in a private document that nobody knew existed, a description of exactly what I needed to do and the exact date I needed to do it by.
I sat in that kitchen for a long time. Antonia made tea again. She told me there were others on that list who had also received messages through Carlo, through other people who had been part of his last weeks. She said she had been slowly finding them. She said Carlo had told her once, a few years before he got sick, that he thought one of the most important things a person could do was pray for specific people with specific intentions.
Not vague prayers for everyone in general, but targeted, named, intentional prayer. The way you would write someone a personal letter instead of a mass announcement. He had been doing that his whole life. He had lists going back years. 15 names on the last one. 15 people he had designated in his final weeks as needing something specific from God.
And he had prayed for each of us by name, noted what he believed we needed, and in several cases found a way to deliver a message. I was one of 15 strangers that a dying 15-year-old had decided to love with precision. Hey, one more pause before I give you the ending, and I mean this sincerely. I’d love to know where you’re connecting from today.
Drop a comment with your location, your city, your country, wherever you are in the world right now watching this. And if you haven’t subscribed yet, please do it now. I know I keep asking, and I know you’ve heard it before, but this channel runs entirely on this community, and your subscription is the thing that makes it possible for me to keep going, to keep finding these stories and putting them into the world. It means everything.
Okay. The ending. It is 2026 now. Daniel is 25 years old. He is studying to become a physician, a real doctor, not a paramedic like his father. Though I like to think he got the impulse from somewhere. We talk every week, sometimes twice a week. He calls me just to talk, not about anything specific, just to be in contact.
And every single time he calls, I think about a 6-year-old boy on a living room floor holding a crayon drawing. And I think about a dying teenager in a hospital transport who told me to choose my son. And I am overwhelmed every time by the specific, precise, personal nature of grace. Elena and I have been married for 24 years now. We are not perfect.
We argue about ordinary things. But I am there. I am present in a way that I was not before October 16th, 2006. And she knows it and I know it. And that makes every ordinary Tuesday mean something it didn’t used to mean. I started going to mass. Not immediately. It took about 2 years. A gradual movement towards something I kept finding myself curious about.
I go every Sunday now. I’m not going to tell you it transformed me overnight or that I have all the answers about faith. I don’t. But I go and when I go, I think about a kid who went every single day because he believed something was happening there that couldn’t happen anywhere else. And I figure if he was right about the rosary under the left side of the bed, and he was right about October 16th, and he was right about Daniel’s name when I never said it, then maybe he was right about that, too.
Blessed Carlo Acutis was beatified on October 10th, 2020 in Assisi. When I read the news, I sat at my kitchen table and I read the description of who he was and what his life had looked like. And I recognized him completely. The jeans, the sneakers, the laptop, the lists, the precise and personal love for specific people.
I recognized him and I felt in a way I still can’t fully articulate known. Because that is the thing about this story that I have spent 17 years trying to understand. It is not really a story about the impossible. It is a story about being seen. A 15-year-old boy dying in a Milan hospital chose to spend part of his remaining energy praying for a 31-year-old American paramedic he had met twice.
Because he believed that paramedic needed to come down from the wall before a specific date and sit on a floor with his son. He didn’t need to do that. There was nothing in it for him. He was facing something far more pressing than my relationship with my son, and he did it anyway with precision and care and the quiet confidence of someone who understood exactly what he was doing.
I carry that. I carry it the way Antonia carries that white rosary with the blue beads, the one that had been lost for 3 weeks and was found because a boy who loved his mother couldn’t leave her in her grief without finding a way to help. I carry it the way you carry something you didn’t earn and can’t fully explain.
That simply arrived in your life and changed the shape of everything that came after. If you’ve been watching this and there’s someone in your family who needs that kind of precision, that kind of named intentional specific love, I want you to know that it’s available. The book in the first pinned comment, 33 days with Carlo Acutis, is exactly that kind of practice. It’s not vague.
It’s not generic. It asks you to pray for specific people with specific intentions, 1 day at a time for 33 days. It asks you to do what Carlo did. Choose a name, write it down, and love that person the way someone who isn’t afraid of the impossible would love them. The link is in the first pinned comment. It costs almost nothing.
What it might do for the person you’re thinking of right now, the one whose face came to your mind while I was telling this story, I can’t guarantee. But I can tell you what I know. A boy who was dying chose to love 15 strangers with precision and care, and at least one of those strangers sat down on a living room floor on October 16th, 2006, and chose his son.
And 20 years later, that choice is still echoing forward, still making mornings mean something, still making Tuesday phone calls feel like gifts. That’s what precision looks like. That’s what Carlo Acutis looked like. And he is waiting. I genuinely believe this to pray for the people whose names you’re willing to bring to him.
My name is Marcus Webb. I’m 51 years old. I’m a paramedic. And a 15-year-old boy I transported twice told me my son’s name, found a rosary under a bed, and wrote the date of the most important moment of my life in a text file on his laptop 32 days before it happened. I don’t have a tidy explanation for any of it.
I just have my son’s voice on the phone every week. I just have Elena asking me where I am and me being able to say, “Right here. I’m right here.” And I mean it. Thank you for watching. Thank you for staying with this story all the way to the end. And wherever you are watching from, drop it in the comments. I read every single one.
Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.