When I told my boyfriend, Derek, about the baby, he packed his things and disappeared before I could even process what was happening. Just like that, I was left with a mortgage, mounting bills, and a kind of fear that never really lets you breathe.
For months, I’d been drowning in overdue notices.
Last Tuesday felt like rock bottom.
It was 95 degrees. My back throbbed constantly. And that morning, I got the call I had been dreading—
Foreclosure had officially begun.
I couldn’t breathe inside the house anymore, so I stepped out onto the porch, hoping the air might steady me.
That’s when I saw my neighbor, Mrs. Harper.
She was 82, recently widowed, and struggling to push a rusted lawnmower through grass that had grown almost to her knees. Her blouse was soaked with sweat, her hands trembling as she tried to force the machine forward.
I should have gone back inside.
I had enough problems of my own.
But I didn’t.
I walked over, gently took the mower from her, and told her to sit down.
Then I spent the next three hours mowing her entire lawn.
My ankles were swollen. My clothes clung to me with sweat. More than once, I had to stop just to catch my breath and steady myself through the dizziness.