Her Backpack Split Open—And What I Found Inside Changed How I See Money, Parenting, and Survival
In our home, “enough” wasn’t a comforting word. It was a number I chased every day—on grocery receipts, on utility statements, and in the quiet moments when my husband, Dan, came home tired from another long shift. We weren’t in crisis, but we weren’t secure either. We lived in that stressful middle ground where one surprise expense—car trouble, a medical bill, a colder-than-normal month—could push everything off balance.
I’d gotten good at making food stretch. A small pack of chicken could become dinner, leftovers, and tomorrow’s lunches if I planned carefully. I told myself that discipline and hard work would eventually make life feel less tight.
Then one ordinary Tuesday, my daughter walked in with a classmate—and my definition of “enough” cracked wide open.
A Quiet Guest With a Loud Kind of Hunger
Sam, our thirteen-year-old, came through the door like a storm, holding it open for a girl I didn’t recognize.
