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She was young but her spirit had already walked many, many
miles. Her voice was rough, her eyes were tired, her body dragged. I saw her in
the hallway after she brought her little girl to school and before she headed
back to the projects where she and her three children lived. It was November in
Raleigh, North Carolina, 1997.
“G’morning, Tina,” I said to her with a gentle smile.
She looked up at me with a softness I hadn’t seen from her
before, as if she needed kindness so badly, as if without it, she didn’t know
how she would make it through her day.
I reached out to
touch her arm, to give it a little squeeze. “I don’t have anyone in my office
right now,” I said. “If you have time, I’d love to talk to you.”
She nodded and
swallowed hard, trying her best to hold back tears.
I moved my hand to
hers and held it tightly as we walked back to my office. “It’s gonna be
alright," I whispered. "It’s all gonna be alright.”
She told me her story that day, a story of hope and disappointment,
abuse and tragedy, love and loss.
“I apply for jobs
when the kids are in school but preschool is only a few hours and I need a job
to pay for childcare, but I need childcare to have a job. I am so tired, Miss
Brynne, so tired. And it feels like no one cares a thing. I go to the store and
no one looks me in the eye, no one pays me any mind. It’s like I’m invisible,
something no one wants to see. I might not’a gone to college, but I ain’t bad.
I love my children just like the other lady does, I just didn’t never get any
help. I been doing it all on my own since I was fourteen.”
We talked for a long while that day and lit a few candles in
that heart of hers to lighten up the darkest places. Tina cried and she cried
and she cried. And I listened and held her, hard, the best way I knew how.
A few weeks later it was nearing Thanksgiving. I knew Tina
and her family wouldn’t have much but I didn't say anything. Until one day, the
last day of school before the holiday break, I had to.
“Tina?” I said to her, after she watched her little girl run
into the classroom to play with friends. “I have something for you,” and I
motioned for her to come with me.
As we walked to my car, I told Tina a story about an old
lady who had a lot of money. I told her how the old lady was angry and hurt
because no one needed her, not even her money. But after a while, that old lady
realized that for people to care about her she needed to start caring for
others, first. Maybe if she gave, maybe if she smiled, maybe if she looked
someone straight in the eye with kindness from her heart, maybe then, what she
needed herself, would be returned.
Tina listened and
smiled to herself, thinking as we walked.
“So this old lady,” I said, “she knew I worked in the
projects and decided that she’d try caring right away. So she gave me some
money and told me what to buy.” I opened the trunk of my car.
Tina looked in at a turkey and all the fixings for a
Thanksgiving feast. She covered her mouth and her eyes filled with tears. “For
me?” she said. “Really? For me and my babies? Well, I never—”
My own eyes
started welling up, too. “She asked me to give all this to someone who was in
danger of thinking no one cared. And for me to tell you she did. She didn’t
want any thanks, she just wanted you to keep believing that the world is a good
and kind place. For it is, Tina. It is.”
We hugged that day in the cold, dirty parking lot of
Raleigh’s toughest neighborhood. Around us there was anger and ugly, but the
two of us, together we were our own little island. And that was all that
mattered. That, and that Tina never felt indebted to me for buying her
Thanksgiving dinner that year.
*
* *
Happy Thanksgiving,
dear Readers.
I am grateful for
you.
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