The Pier Where Dreams Went Dark
The picturesque Rogers Park pier, usually a place for reflection and friendship, has become the site of a tragedy that defies logic. Sheridan Gorman, just 18 years old and radiating the bright energy of a college freshman, had her entire life ahead of her. She was supposed to be worried about final exams and weekend plans, not navigating the terrifying reality of a man hiding in the darkness of a lighthouse. When the peace of a spring evening was shattered by gunfire, it wasn’t just one life that was lost—it was the collective hope of the Loyola University community. The silence that follows her passing is heavy with the weight of “what might have been.”
A Freshman Year That Should Have Never Ended
College is the threshold of adulthood, a time when the world feels wide and the possibilities are endless. Sheridan was at the very start of that beautiful transformation. As a student at Loyola, she was building a foundation for her dreams, making friends that were supposed to be in her wedding, and discovering the woman she was meant to become. To have that future snatched away in an instant of senseless violence is a cruelty that leaves the soul reeling. She wasn’t a statistic in a city headline; she was a daughter whose parents are now facing an unimaginable void, and a friend whose laughter is now a haunting echo in the dorm halls.
Honor Her Name, Not Just Her Tragedy
While the circumstances of her death are shocking, we must refuse to let the violence define Sheridan. We must remember the girl who smiled easily, the friend who listened intently, and the young woman who brought joy to everyone she touched. Her life had immense value long before a single night in March, and that value remains. We honor Sheridan by demanding safety for our youth and by carrying her kindness forward into a world that feels increasingly dark. Her story did not end at the pier; it continues in every person who fights for justice in her name and every classmate who lives a little more fully because she no longer can.