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He scrubbed floors as a night cleaner in a downtown office building. On weekends, he washed dishes in a musty diner. He took on renovation jobs when someone needed a fence fixed or a leaky faucet repaired.
He slept barely four hours a night. He ate everything his children left on their plates. Every dollar went toward rent, shoes that fit, or groceries, which were barely enough.
There was an old man with frostbitten fingers who wrapped his hands in newspaper to keep warm, a woman who wore the same tattered coat every day, and a young man who never spoke, just sat shivering under the streetlights.
Ethan knew what it was like to feel cold. He knew what hopelessness felt like. Even though he had almost nothing himself, he couldn’t ignore the suffering and pretend he didn’t see it.
One morning, after selling an old toolbox at a pawn shop for $25, Ethan stopped at a discount store. He bought three cheap fleece blankets, some canned soup, a loaf of bread, and a pack of hand warmers. He carefully wrapped everything in plastic bags and placed them on the bench where the old man usually sat. He put a handwritten note inside: “These blankets are not lost. If you are cold, without shelter, or need comfort, please take one. You are important.”
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