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.
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.