A Chance To Rewrite My Wrongs

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I used to believe that life never gave second chances. Once a mistake was made, it became a stain you carried forever, a shadow that followed you even on the brightest days. For years, I walked around with my own shadows choices I had made in anger, decisions made out of fear, and moments of silence when I should have spoken. I thought those wrongs defined me. But life, in its strange kindness, offered me one more chance one chance to rewrite my wrongs.

It began on a quiet morning when I returned to the place I once called home. The old compound had not changed much: the cracked walls, the echo of children laughing, the smell of wet sand after the previous night's rain. Everything looked the same, yet something inside me felt different. I had come back to face the people I had hurt, especially Mama David, the woman who once treated me like her own child but whom I abandoned when she needed me most.

Guilt twisted in my stomach as I walked toward her small shop beside the mango tree. She was sorting tomatoes, humming softly the way she always did. Her back was turned, but I could already feel her presence, warm and familiar.

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" Mama David," I said, my voice trembling.

She paused, slowly turning around. For a moment, her eyes searched my face, trying to understand if what she was seeing was real. Then her expression softened, though it held a sadness I had caused.

" You came back," she said quietly.

I nodded. "I'm sorry. I hurt you. I ran away because I was ashamed, but I shouldn't have. You were there for me , and I wasn't there for you."

She signed and wiped her hands on her wrapper. "We all make mistakes, my child. What matters is what you do after."

Her forgiveness didn't come instantly, but her words opened a door I thought was permanently closed. For weeks, I helped her at the shop washing vegetables, carrying baskets, sweeping the ground. At first, the neighbours whispered, remembering the trouble I had caused in the past. But slowly, as they watched me show up every day, their whispers changed. Some greeted me again, others smiled politely. Bit by bit, the weight I carried began to lift.

One evening, as we closed the shop, Mama David placed a small tomato in my hand. "This is for you," she said. "A reminder that even broken things can grow again."

I held it gently, feeling tears sting my eyes. It wasn't just a tomato; it was a symbol of my new beginning.

I learned that rewriting wrongs isn't about pretending the past never happened. It's about owning it, learning from it, and choosing to become better than your mistake. Life had given me another chance not to erase my story, but to write a better ending.

And this time, I won't run away from it.

(Image created on ChatGPT)

Thanks for reading

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