For years, your mother survived on exhaustion. She cleaned houses in the morning, washed dishes in a diner in the afternoon, and folded laundry at night for families who looked down on her. She came home with cracked hands, swollen feet, and eyes so tired they seemed older than her body. But the moment she opened the door and saw the five of you, she smiled anyway.
You were named Grace, Hope, Daniel, Elijah, and Ruth. Your mother said she chose those names because one day, when life became too heavy, you would need to remember what you were made of. Grace, because kindness could survive poverty. Hope, because darkness never lasted forever. Daniel, because courage could stand in front of lions. Elijah, because miracles sometimes arrived through fire. Ruth, because loyalty could rebuild a broken family.
The town was not kind. People whispered when your mother walked by with five children trailing behind her like ducklings. Some laughed from porches. Some shook their heads in fake pity. Some said Ramon had been smart to leave before all those babies dragged him under.
“There goes Maria and her little curse,” one woman said outside church one Sunday.
You were only six, but you heard it. All five of you heard it. Your mother heard it too. She stopped walking. For a second, you thought she would turn around and finally say something. Instead, she knelt in front of you, straightened Daniel’s collar, wiped dirt from Ruth’s cheek, and said softly, “Stand tall. People who don’t understand blessings often mistake them for burdens.”
That became the sentence you carried: Blessings, not burdens.