My name is Evan, and if you met me on the street, you probably wouldn’t remember me.
I’m thirty-six, average height, always a little tired, usually smelling like motor oil no matter how much I scrub my hands. I work at a small auto repair shop on the edge of town—the kind of place people only come to when something’s already gone wrong.
It’s not much to look at. The paint is peeling off the walls, the floor is stained with years of grease, and the old radio in the corner only works when it feels like it. But it’s steady work.
And steady is something I’ve learned not to take for granted.
Because when I leave that shop every night, I don’t go home to rest.
I go home to my real life.
Three kids. All six years old.
Triplets.
The Life I Built Without a Choice
People always react the same way when they hear that.
“Triplets? On your own?”
I just nod.
There’s no short way to explain it.
Their mother left when they were barely a year old. No big fight. No warning signs I understood at the time. Just one morning where everything looked normal… until it wasn’t.
She stood in the doorway with a small bag and said, “I can’t do this anymore.”
I asked her what that meant.
She didn’t answer.
She just walked out.
And that was it.
At first, I thought she’d come back.
Then I hoped she would.
Eventually… I stopped expecting anything at all.
The Only Reason I Didn’t Fall Apart
If it wasn’t for my mom, I don’t think I would’ve made it.
She’s seventy-two now, but somehow she still moves through the house like she’s holding it together with invisible threads.
She wakes the kids up when I’ve already left for work.
Braids my daughter’s hair better than I ever could.
Makes sure the boys don’t wear mismatched shoes—something they seem to enjoy doing on purpose.
She doesn’t complain.
Not once.
And I don’t say it enough, but she saved us.
All of us.
The Kind of Day That Breaks You Slowly
Last Tuesday wasn’t special.
That’s the thing.
The hardest days rarely are.
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