I’m a 34-year-old single dad to twin girls, Bella and Lily. Their mom left when they were still in diapers—said she wasn’t “cut out for midnight feedings.” I begged her to stay, but she never looked back.
So I figured it out myself. Remote IT jobs, working during naps, waking before sunrise, collapsing after midnight. Some days I felt like a ghost, but I kept going. Because those little girls needed me.
This year, though, everything started falling apart. Their daycare shut down. My company slashed my pay by 20%. My mom needed surgery that Medicare didn’t fully cover. Rent went up, and then the washing machine broke. If you’ve ever had toddlers, you know—laundry is survival.
For three days, I hand-washed clothes in the bathtub until my hands cracked and bled. Finally, I strapped the girls into their stroller and went hunting for a used washer, praying I’d find one that worked.
In a dusty secondhand shop, I spotted a beat-up Whirlpool for $120. As I was checking it out, an older woman in a floral blouse smiled at the twins. “They’re adorable. Twins?” she asked. I nodded, told her it was just me. She touched the stroller gently and whispered, “You’re doing a good job. Don’t forget that.” Then she walked away.
I bought the washer, hauled it home, hooked it up—and it wouldn’t spin. I swore under my breath and opened the drum to check. Something was stuck inside.
It was a small box. On top, a folded note in elegant handwriting:
“For you and your children. – M.”
My hands trembled as I lifted the lid. Inside was a thick stack of hundred-dollar bills—neatly bound, almost five thousand dollars. I thought it had to be a mistake or a trap. But then I unfolded the rest of the note:
“I lost my son years ago. He was a single dad too. He never got the help he needed. Please use this to make things a little easier. And keep loving those girls like you do. That’s worth more than any money.”
I didn’t even realize I was crying until Bella reached up and wiped my cheek. “Daddy sad?” she asked.
“No, sweetheart,” I whispered, pulling both girls close. “Daddy’s just really, really thankful.”
I don’t know who M is—maybe I never will. But I know this: in a world that often feels cruel and unfair, there are still angels among us. Some leave wings behind. Others leave hope hidden inside a broken washer.