“Because I knew,” she said, “that one day, the world would see what I saw in you.”
I leaned against her shoulder, the smell of soap and rice clinging to her clothes, the sound of crickets filling the air.
And for the first time, I realized something.
She had been carrying more than bottles all those years.
She had been carrying hope.
The kind that no one could ever throw away.
Years later, when I stood in front of my own students, I told them the same thing my mother once told me:
“Your worth isn’t measured by where you come from — but by how far you’re willing to go.”
And in every word I spoke, in every lesson I taught, I heard her voice again — the voice of a woman who once walked among garbage and raised a son who turned it into gold.
The son of a garbage collector… and the pride of his mother.
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