Here is an example of one such such story...
I grew up with a single mom and was the youngest of four. We
shared a one bedroom apartment on the “wrong” side of town. When you are poor,
life is simple because the answer is always NO! Or is it?
During the summers, I lived with my great-grandparents. Grandfather was paralyzed but he was a kind, wise old man and with grandma, who
had arrived through Ellis Island, they were a transformative force in my young
life. Their struggles with disability, economic hardship of the 1930s, the loss
of a child in wartime, the loss of another to breast cancer, taught me that
when you’re on the bottom, all you can do is look up.
I was that kid who tried out for the majorette squad, and when I
failed, I started my own majorette squad of one (that was the day I decided to make things happen, not just wait for them to happen)!
After high school, I was a live-in nanny for a woman raising her
granddaughter. Eventually, she got sick and I became the caregiver for both the
child and my employer.
I found an apartment, worked in a nursing facility and attended
college at night. At the age of nineteen, I opened a childcare center
that eventually grew to serve 125 children.
Marriage started off hard. The night of our wedding, John’s dad
had a heart attack and became an invalid. We spent years fighting to keep him
alive.
John is an immigrant, he suffered from polio has had several
falls. One fall broke his back. He recovered; we are still together and strong. We've lost money, raised children and buried loved ones. We feel pain, joy and
the satisfaction of knowing that we will always prevail as long as we stay
committed to our task.
I empathize with the young, the “broken” and the elderly, because I've been two of those already!