At seventeen, I was thrown out of my home with nothing but a backpack and nowhere to go.
I moved to a nearby town to stay with my girlfriend, believing love would be enough to survive.
It wasn’t.
Within days, I was broke, hungry, and sleeping on a thin mattress in a cramped room.
The only job I could get was in a hospital laundry room filled with heat and the smell of bleach.
I worked long shifts folding sheets until my hands shook from exhaustion and lack of food.
My first paycheck was delayed, and I quickly ran out of money.
I survived on cheap rice and tomato paste that barely kept me going.
Hunger became constant, but I tried to hide it from everyone around me.
By my third day, I was so weak I could barely focus on my work.
That’s when a quiet older man named Carl started watching me carefully.
He didn’t ask questions—he just noticed everything I was going through.
Then one afternoon, Carl walked over and handed me a brown paper bag that would change everything I thought I knew about kindness.
What I didn’t realize at the time was that the “extra sandwiches” weren’t an accident—and the truth behind them would stay with me forever.
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