One day outside a grocery store, I saw a pregnant woman with bruises on her face begging for food. While my husband harshly told her to “get a job” and questioned why she would have a child in poverty, I felt compelled to help. I hugged her, gave her $300, and hoped it would get her through a difficult time.
A month later, my husband rushed into the house looking terrified, saying two large men were on our porch asking for me. Nervous and unsure what to expect, I stepped outside. To my surprise, they introduced themselves as Rosa’s brothers and thanked me for helping their sister when she had nowhere else to turn.
They explained that Rosa had run away after her father refused to accept her relationship. When she became pregnant, her fiancé abandoned her, leaving her alone, hungry, and struggling with severe anemia that caused the bruises on her face. The money I gave her helped her survive long enough for her brothers to find her, bring her home, and reconcile her with their family.
Before leaving, Rosa’s brothers repaid me $1,000 and promised I could count on them anytime. Then the older brother looked toward my husband and quietly said, “You deserve better than this person.” His words stayed with me. Helping Rosa not only changed her future and her baby’s future—it also made me take a hard look at my own life and the kind of treatment I was willing to accept.