My mom died giving birth to me, so my father, Johnny, raised me on his own. He packed my lunches before heading to work, made pancakes every Sunday without fail, and even taught himself how to braid hair from YouTube videos when I was in second grade.
Dad worked as the janitor at my school, which meant I spent years hearing classmates mock him: “That’s the janitor’s daughter… Her dad scrubs our toilets.”
I never cried in front of them, but at home, I let the tears fall.
Dad always knew. He’d set a plate in front of me and say, “You know what I think about people who make themselves big by making others feel small?”
“Yeah?” I’d ask, eyes glistening.
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Mic
Dresses
High school dance
“Not much, sweetie… not much.”
Sewing machine sales
And somehow, that always helped.
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