I became pregnant at seventeen, and overnight it felt like everyone had an opinion about my future. People looked at me with pity, judgment, or disappointment, convinced I was headed for failure. One afternoon, while standing in a grocery store line counting coupons, an elderly woman approached me. Without saying much, she slipped a folded twenty-dollar bill into my hand and whispered, “Diapers aren’t cheap, sweetheart,” before quietly walking away.
When I unfolded the bill later that evening, a tiny note fell out. Written in careful handwriting were five simple words: You’re stronger than you think. At a time when I felt scared, overwhelmed, and completely alone, those words became my lifeline. I carried the note in my wallet through sleepless nights, difficult days, and every challenge that came with raising my son.
Years later, after my little boy had started school, I took the worn note out again. The ink was fading, but for the first time I noticed something written faintly on the back. It was my full name. I stared at it in shock. I had never met that woman before, and I couldn’t understand how she could possibly have known who I was.
Curious, I showed the note to my mother. Instead of looking confused, she smiled sadly and explained that the woman had once been a struggling neighbor she had helped years earlier when no one else would. She had never forgotten that kindness. In her own quiet way, she had returned it to our family when we needed it most. That was the day I learned that kindness has a remarkable way of finding its way home