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Every Christmas, my mother carried a warm meal to a homeless man at the laundromat down our street. She did it year after year without fail. This time, she wasn’t there anymore—cancer had taken her. So I went in her place, continuing what she had started. But the moment I saw him, I knew something was different. And nothing could have prepared me for the truth she had hidden all those years.

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People love sharing pictures of their holiday traditions, like everything belongs in a perfect magazine spread.

Ours never looked like that.

Each Christmas Eve, my mom would cook a meal so rich and comforting that the entire apartment felt alive with its scent.

If she had enough money, there would be honey-glazed ham. There were always buttery mashed potatoes, green beans cooked with bacon, and cornbread that looked as good as it tasted.

But the most meaningful dish was never for us.

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