I got pregnant at 15, and that’s when I learned what judgment really feels like. The stares, the whispers, the quiet assumptions that my life was already ruined before it even began. I tried to grow a thick skin, to build a wall just to keep moving forward. But some days, the weight of it all nearly crushed me.
One afternoon, I was standing in line at a corner store with a few groceries and my tired baby on my hip. An elderly woman behind me tapped my shoulder. She smiled kindly, slipped a folded $20 bill into my hand, and said softly, “Here, honey. Diapers get expensive.” I was too stunned to say more than a shaky thank-you before she turned and walked away.
That evening, when I unfolded the bill, I found a slip of paper tucked inside. In delicate handwriting, it read: “You’re stronger than you think.” I carried that note in my wallet for years. On nights when doubt crept in, I’d pull it out and remind myself that maybe—just maybe—I really could do this.
Years later, while cleaning through old boxes, I noticed something faint on the back of the note—my own name, written in the same handwriting. I couldn’t place it, so I told my mom the story. She went quiet for a moment, then smiled knowingly. “That was Mrs. Langston,” she said. “She used to live down the street when you were little. I once helped her through a hard time. Looks like she remembered—and passed it on.”
I still carry that note today. Not just as a reminder of my own strength, but of the ripple effect of kindness. What you give doesn’t disappear—it circles back, often when it’s needed most.