Ethan looked worried.
“We’ve been trying to save for a ramp for over a year. It’s just… taking time. Insurance won’t cover it.”
I apologized for what they were dealing with, thanked her, wished them well, and we walked home in silence.
But that wasn’t the end of it.
That night, Ethan didn’t turn on his games or pick up his phone. He sat at the kitchen table with a pencil and a stack of paper, sketching.
His dad had taught him how to build things before he passed away three months ago. It started small—a birdhouse, a shelf—then grew into bigger projects. Ethan loved it.
Now I watched him, focused and intent.
“What are you doing?”
He didn’t look up. “I think I can build a ramp.”
The next day after school, Ethan poured out his savings jar onto the table.
Coins. Bills. Everything he had.
“That’s for your new bicycle,” I said carefully.
“I know.”
“Are you sure about this?”
“He can’t even get off his porch, Mom.”
I didn’t argue after that.
We went to the hardware store together. Ethan picked out wood, screws, sandpaper, and tools we didn’t already have. He asked questions, wrote things down, and double-checked measurements.
This wasn’t a kid playing around.
He had a plan.
For three days, Ethan worked on the project. After school, he dropped his backpack and got straight to work until it got dark.
Measuring. Cutting. Adjusting angles. Sanding.
I helped where I could—holding boards steady, handing him tools—but he led everything.
By the third evening, his hands were covered in small cuts. But when he stepped back and looked at the finished ramp, he smiled.
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