An 80-Year-Old Woman Gave Away Interview Shoes Until One Came Back-tantan

Vivian never meant to start anything.

At eighty years old, she had no office, no nonprofit, no grant money, and no reason to believe anyone in Charlotte would care about the shoe boxes stacked in her hallway.

She had only a grocery tote, a bus pass when she could afford one, and a habit of looking closely at things other people were done with.

Image

On Saturday mornings, she went to estate sales.

Not the kind where people whispered over antiques and tried to look richer than they were.

The kind held in old houses with sagging porches, crowded garages, and bedroom closets emptied into cardboard boxes.

Vivian noticed shoes first.

She noticed the cracked heels, the softened leather, the careful way a woman’s life stayed inside the shape of a pair of loafers long after the woman was gone.

Black pumps.

Brown flats.

Navy office shoes with worn insoles and strong seams.

She could tell which shoes had carried somebody to work every morning.

She could tell which ones had been bought for church, interviews, funerals, and days when a woman needed the world to take her seriously.

Sometimes the family running the sale barely looked at them.

“Two dollars a pair,” someone would say from the driveway.

Vivian would lift one shoe, bend the toe, check the heel, and ask if they would take one.

She was not cheap because she wanted to be.

She was cheap because the bus did not take pride as payment.

Neither did the grocery store.

By the time she carried the shoes home, her fingers would ache from the bag handles and her knees would feel stiff as porch wood in January.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *