WE’RE HOMELESS, BUT MY DAUGHTER STILL MAKES SURE THE PUPPY EATS FIRST

The hardest part of being homeless wasn’t the cold or the stares—it was watching my kids slowly lose their light. My daughter Savannah still smiled, still colored signs to make people “care more.”

My son Liam stopped asking when we’d go home. Then came Clover—a stray puppy my daughter wrapped in her hoodie without hesitation, feeding her scraps she herself hadn’t eaten.

That tiny act of love somehow opened the first door. A stranger knelt, pet Clover, asked my name, and handed me a card. It led to Ms. Delgado—a woman who listened, offered shelter, and helped me find a job opening at a reopened mill.

Soon, we had beds. Warm food. Routine. My old supervisor vouched for me. I started work as a supervisor, Savannah went to school, Liam found joy in basketball again. We weren’t rich. But we were home.

When I was asked how I kept going, I looked at Savannah and said, “Because love doesn’t quit.”

Even when we had nothing, we had each other.

That was everything.

**Moral:** Sometimes hope starts with a crayon sign, a stray dog, or a kind stranger. No act of love is ever too small—it just might be the start of your second chance.

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