At 34 weeks pregnant, I felt like my world was collapsing.
The father of my baby had walked away the moment I decided to keep our child. Bills covered every inch of my kitchen table. The bank had started sending foreclosure notices. Some days, I sat staring at the numbers, wondering how I was supposed to raise a baby when I could barely keep a roof over my own head.
One hot afternoon, after another stressful phone call, I stepped outside for air and noticed my elderly neighbor, Mrs. Higgins, struggling to push a lawn mower across her yard.
She was 82 years old.
Sweating.
Exhausted.
And far too stubborn to ask for help.
Despite my aching back and swollen feet, I walked over and gently took the mower from her hands. She protested at first, but eventually sat on her porch while I finished mowing the entire lawn.
When I was done, she handed me a glass of lemonade and asked a simple question.
“Are you really okay?”
For some reason, I told her everything.
The breakup.
The debt.
The fear.
The foreclosure.
She listened quietly and squeezed my hand.
Before I left, she smiled and said, “Don’t let hardship make you hard.”
The next morning, flashing lights woke me up.
A sheriff stood at my door.
Mrs. Higgins had passed away during the night.
Then he handed me an envelope she had left in my mailbox.
Inside were legal papers, a paid-in-full mortgage statement, and a handwritten letter.
She had used her savings to pay off my mortgage.
As tears filled my eyes, I read her final words:
“You reminded me what kindness looks like.”
That day changed my life forever.
And months later, when my daughter was born, I gave her the name Higgins—so I would never forget the woman who taught me that one act of compassion can change a person’s entire future.