GOLD CANYON, AZ (CBS5) - It's been more than three months since a small plane carrying six people crashed into the Superstition Mountains.
Karen Perry lost all three of her young children on that flight the night before Thanksgiving.
Now Perry is facing another loss - her home. Perry said after an outpouring of support for her, Freddie Mac informed her they are not willing to allow someone to purchase her home and then rent it back to her. Perry said they plan to foreclose on the home and told her she must be out of the home by March 15.
"There's days that I wake up that I feel like someone's poured cement on me... where I feel like I can't even move," said Perry in an interview with CBS 5 in late January.
She doesn't have the heart to put her kids' toys away or even wash their clothes that were piling up when she last saw them.
"When I walked in there and looked at that laundry basket and I realized that my kids were never coming home again, I couldn't do it," she said.
Her home is where the memories of her family surround her.
"I was pregnant with my third child when we moved in here, and my middle child was just learning how to walk," she recalled.
After a divorce less than two years ago led to financial troubles, the four-bedroom house in Gold Canyon was nearing foreclosure.
"I need all the help I can get right now, and most of that is just so that I can get on with a new life," Perry said.
Thousands of letters of sympathy and support have poured in along with charitable donations from various groups, including two from Delta Airlines where Karen is a flight attendant.
"It has meant absolutely everything to me," said a grateful Perry.
One of those groups is a non-profit called the Ladies Day Fund, started by a retired flight attendant in New Orleans.
Also, Tina Vallejo, a local singer and songwriter, wrote a song in memory of Perry's three children titled, Fly My Angel.
You can find it on iTunes, and a portion of the sales will also go to help Perry get back on her feet.