Anonymous



I'm a school nurse. We have a rule: students without money for lunch receive only a cold cheese sandwich. Nothing else.

One Wednesday, a sixth-grade boy came in saying his stomach hurt. I've been doing this for twenty years. I know how to tell the difference between real pain… and hunger.

"When was the last time you ate?"

He looked down.

"Yesterday, at lunch."

I gave him a note and sent him to the cafeteria. I asked them to serve him a complete hot meal: pasta, salad, milk… everything.

The cafeteria lady read the note, looked at me… and handed him the tray without saying anything.

He ate like he hadn't eaten in days. He probably hadn't.

Then he came back to my office.

"Am I in trouble?"

"Why would you be?"

"For eating."

"Food is what eating is for."

From then on, I started keeping bars, cookies, and juice in a drawer. For those "headaches" that are really hunger. For those "stomachaches" that are really emptiness.

I know I shouldn't. It goes against the rules. But I don't care.

I mentioned it to the principal once. She looked at me silently for a few seconds…

Then she opened her drawer.

Cookies. Purees. Snacks.

"What drawer?" she asked.

We never talked about it again.

That boy is in high school now. He came to see me last spring.

"I just wanted to tell you that I'm doing well… and that I remembered you. I always will."

Now he volunteers at a food bank every weekend since he was 13.

The best bars I've ever bought in my life.
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