Since I was little, I learned what hardship really looked like. While other kids played with brand-new toys and ate at fast-food places, I stood near small food stalls, hoping the owners might hand me whatever they didn’t sell. Sometimes they did. Sometimes they turned away.
My mother, Maria, woke up before dawn every single day. At 3 a.m., she would leave our tiny shack by the river, pulling on her worn gloves and wrapping a torn scarf around her head. She pushed her wooden cart along muddy roads, collecting plastic bottles, cardboard, and scraps she could sell. By the time I woke up for school, she was already far away—digging through other people’s trash just to keep me alive.
We had almost nothing. Not even a real bed. I studied by candlelight, sitting on an upside-down plastic crate, while my mother counted coins on the floor. Yet no matter how hungry or tired she was, she always smiled.
“Work hard, Daniel,” she’d tell me. “Maybe one day, you won’t ever have to touch garbage.”
THE CRUELTY OF CHILDREN
When I started school, I realized poverty wasn’t just about hunger—it was about humiliation.
My classmates came from better homes. Their parents wore suits, drove cars, and held shiny phones. Mine smelled like the landfill.
The first time someone called me “the trash boy,” I laughed.
The second time, I cried.
By the third time, I stopped talking altogether.
They mocked my torn shoes, my patched uniform, the smell I carried after helping my mother sort bottles at night. They didn’t see the love in my dirt-stained hands. They only saw the dirt.
I tried to hide the truth. I lied about my mother’s job. I said she worked in “recycling,” hoping it sounded respectable. But lies don’t survive long among children.