Friend of Mine – She was 15. The system called her a minor. Her siblings called her mom.
She kept their shoes by the heater so they’d be warm in the morning.
She wrapped peanut butter crackers in paper towels to make them feel like lunchboxes.
She turned shampoo samples into bath night.
She taught the youngest to say “Yes ma’am” when social workers came knocking.
And “We’re fine.” Always “We’re fine.”
Her mother disappeared again.
Her father hadn’t shown up in years.
The motel front desk didn’t ask questions
as long as the weekly payment showed up in crumpled bills.
She figured out how to get those too.
Babysitting. Mopping.
A few coins from strangers when the baby cried loud enough in the lobby.
She missed school the week they had lice.
Missed the dance.
Missed childhood.
But never missed a bedtime story—
even when she had to make one up
about how they’d live in a castle someday
and have a dog and their own beds and enough forks.
The system found them when the fire alarm went off.
A caseworker said,
“Why didn’t you call for help?”
She blinked.
Then pointed to the 3-year-old in her lap and said,
“I was busy.”
They took the kids.
Called it “rescue.”
She called it another kind of abandonment.
She was 15.
But she knew more about love
than most adults ever will.
This is the Real Whirld.
Where minors become mothers
because someone has to keep the lights on.
Even when there aren’t any.
