A man in Deweyville quietly asked me if it was time to go home β€” but when I learned he’d lost everything for the second time and was living in his truck, the moment turned into something far deeper. πŸ‘‰ Full story in the first comment πŸ‘‡


This morning in Deweyville, while filling up my boat, a man approached me. His face showed a weariness no words could fake β€” the weight of too many losses. He quietly asked if it was time yet, if he could go home. I had to tell him no.

His shoulders sank. Then, he opened up: this wasn’t the first time he’d lost everything. It was the second. The first time, he rebuilt. This time, he feared losing the only thing left β€” his daughters.

He’s living in his truck. But he didn’t ask for money or pity. He asked for work. A welder by trade, with his own truck and equipment, he just wanted the chance to provide β€” to hold on to what mattered most.
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One of my fellow officers quietly took a photo of us praying together at that gas station β€” my hand on his shoulder, heads bowed. Looking at it now, I’m reminded: we can’t fix everything, but we can stand beside each other.

He told me his faith is being tested. So I ask you: pray for him. And for every person quietly rebuilding, quietly struggling. Because while faith may waver, compassion and community can carry us through.


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