WOUNDED VETERAN STARTS PICKING UP TRASH—AND PEOPLE START WHISPERING BEHIND MY BACK

WOUNDED VETERAN STARTS PICKING UP TRASH—AND PEOPLE START WHISPERING BEHIND MY BACK

I never thought I’d spend my mornings limping around the Washington Monument with a trash bag in one hand and a grabber in the other. But here I am. Every day, before the tourists flood in, I show up—knee brace on, old army hoodie, busted ankle slowing me down—but I get to work. Bottles, cigarette butts, plastic wrappers… doesn’t matter. I’ve seen worse messes overseas.

At first, I did it for me. Being out there, keeping something iconic clean, made me feel like I was still serving, still useful. But it wasn’t long before I noticed the stares. Some people nodded, maybe thought it was admirable. But others? I’d catch them whispering, looking at me like I was some sad charity case.

Last Tuesday, I overheard one guy say, “Bet he’s doing community service or something.” His friend laughed. I kept my head down, but it stung. I wanted to turn around and tell them exactly why I was there, what it means to me. But I didn’t. I just kept going.

Then, this morning, something weird happened. There was an envelope tucked under one of the benches I usually clear. No name on it, just the words “FOR YOU” scribbled messily.

I stood there staring at it, wondering if someone left it on purpose… or if it was just more trash.

I haven’t opened it yet.

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