Sometimes in this life, people get exactly what they deserve.
This is not a story about that.
Carrie Edberg is a single mother of five who opened her arms and her home to kids with special needs.
In any reasonable universe, she'd win the lottery or get an ice cream flavor named in her honor. Instead, she walked out of her Zimmerman, Minn., home a few weeks ago to find a sinkhole swallowing part of her yard.
"My dad [climbed] in it, and it was up to his waist," said Edberg, who bought the house for her growing family and who will finalize the adoption of her fifth son next week. "It was a couple of feet wide."
She ordered some black dirt, and the family started shoveling it into the hole. But no matter how much they dumped in, it never seemed to fill.
"We were like, 'Where's it going?' " Edberg said with a laugh, describing the dirt vanishing down the void. "So then we got rocks, thinking that would help, and then we put dirt on top of that, and then the rain came and it all washed away."
Three of Edberg's five sons have serious health issues. Their new home in Zimmerman sits on enough land for the boys to play, for their dog, cats, goats and chickens to roam and for families of other medically fragile children to come and enjoy a day out.
But that's not all the house sits on.