They mocked me for being the son of a woman who collected recyclables. But at graduation, one sentence from me… was enough to make the entire room go quiet—and cry.
My name is Ethan. I’m the son of a mother who survives by gathering bottles, cans, and cardboard—anything she can sell so her boy can eat.
Growing up, I learned early what “hard” really meant. While other kids opened new toys and ate pricey snacks, I waited for whatever vendors didn’t want at the end of the day. Before sunrise, my mom was already out the door, a huge sack on her shoulder, heading to the market’s back alley to search for anything that could keep us afloat.
The heat. The stench. The sharp glass. The wet cardboard. The fish bones.
That was her routine.
And still… I was never ashamed of her.
I was six when the first insults hit.
“You stink!”
“You’re trash!”
“Recycler’s kid! Haha!”
Every laugh felt like a stone dropping into my chest. At home, I cried where she couldn’t hear.One night she asked gently, “Sweetheart… why do you look so sad?”
I forced a smile. “Nothing, Mom. Just tired.”
But inside, I was breaking.
Years rolled on—from elementary to high school—and nothing changed. No one wanted to sit beside me. Group projects? I was always the last pick. Field trips? I was invisible.
“Recycler’s son” wasn’t a nickname. It was a label they stamped on me.
I didn’t fight back. I didn’t argue. I just made a promise to myselfI will study until my situation has no choice but to change.
While they played games, I saved coins for photocopies. While they upgraded phones, I walked home to save bus fare. And every night, when my mom fell asleep with that sack of bottles beside her like a shield, I whispered into the dark:
“One day, Mom… we’re leaving this life behind.”
Then graduation day arrived.