This is a very intelligent dying little girl. Heaven hasn't just been sprung on her. She is a Christian with Christian parents. Heaven is something we believe to exist. I can't recall ever not knowing about heaven.
I get that. I'm not suggesting that she should, because she's in an unfortunate situation, suddenly have her entire world-view ripped asunder and be told that it's all a lie. I'd prefer a world where she hadn't been brought up being told that these things were true, but that's an hypothetical, it's not about this situation.
You, like Jeremy and Shaker, offer nothing but the coldness of your atheism.
Perhaps, perhaps not. I can see how the idea of heaven might be a personal comfort at times like these, but I also see that it's a comfort to the sort of idiot in the US that votes against climate change legislation because it doesn't matter, he'll be in heaven soon and heaven's perfect. That the idea might be comforting doesn't make it true, and doesn't stop the belief having consequences as well as benefits.
You say it's true but you have no proof.
No, I don't, pay attention. I say that there are innumerable claims about possible afterlives out there, some still believed and some not, and all with exactly the same evidence: none. In the absence of any substantiation for the idea of an afterlife I'd rather we concentrated on what's demonstrably real: how about focussing on this life rather than the next.
She knows her time is short staying at home or going for more painful treatments and I thank God she knows Heaven awaits her.
The point is, though, that if Heaven isn't real she's making that 'informed' decision based on faulty information. She's forgoing spending time with her parents, albeit in pain, because she thinks she's going to get another chance to see them. If she new this was all the time she had, would she make the same decision? Would I? Would you? I'm not sure, until we're there, any of us know.
O.