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“They used to make fun of me for being the son of a garbage collector—but at graduation, I only said one sentence…and everyone fell silent, with tears in their eyes…”-kimthuy

Posted on December 16, 2025
Post Views: 91

When I was eight years old, a boy at school asked me what my mother did for a living. I told him the truth, without hesitation. “It’s a garbage dump.”

He laughed so loudly that others gathered around, curious. That day marked the beginning of a new life, one defined by whispers, glances, and the cruel nickname they gave me.

“The Garbage Boy” became permanent. Recess, class, even teachers occasionally said it as a joke. I forced laughter, hiding the pain that burned inside, crying alone when nobody watched.

At home, I would lock myself in the bathroom, letting tears stream until I felt I might stop breathing. My mother, exhausted, never noticed. She worked long, grueling hours.

She left at four in the morning, returning at six in the evening, her uniform soaked with sweat and smell no soap could fully erase, yet always wearing a patient, loving smile.“How was school, son?” she asked. “Okay, Mom,” I lied. I was doing poorly socially, not academically. I was always first in my class but invisible among peers.

Nobody wanted to sit with me. Nobody invited me to parties. Group projects assigned me to other rejected students. And I hated it, hated myself, hated my mother’s job silently.

I resented that we had no money. While classmates’ parents arrived in SUVs, my mother came in a borrowed garbage truck, stinking, making me shrink further, wishing to disappear from public view.

In high school, I once asked her not to pick me up after school. She looked confused. “But son, it’s too far for you to walk,” she said gently.

“It doesn’t matter, Mom. I want to exercise,” I lied. She understood. That day, I walked two hours in the sun, returning to find her crying silently in the kitchen.

She never asked why. I never explained. Since then, she never picked me up again. I carried the guilt for years, longing to ease her burden, longing to escape judgment from classmates.

When choosing a career, everyone expected practicality, something quick to provide money. I shocked them all. I chose Medicine, not for myself but to honor her sacrifices and prove our worth.

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