As a broke single dad raising three kids, I thought buying a $60 secondhand washing machine was already the low point of my week. What I didn’t realize was that it was about to test who I really was.
I’m 30. My name’s Graham.
And I’m tired in a way sleep doesn’t fix.
Everything else in life feels like background noise most days—work, bills, routines—but some moments cut through all of that. Finding that ring was one of them.
Our washing machine broke down in the middle of a cycle. It groaned, shook, and then just stopped.
Water sat in the drum, and I stood there staring at it, feeling like I had somehow failed at something as basic as keeping things running for my kids.
“Is it dead?” Milo asked. He’s four and already expects the worst.
“Yeah, bud,” I said. “It gave it everything it had.”
Nora, who’s eight, crossed her arms. “We can’t just not have a washer.”
Hazel, six, clutched her stuffed rabbit. “Are we poor?”
“We’re… resourceful,” I told her, forcing a small smile.
The truth was, we didn’t have the money for anything new.
So that weekend, I loaded all three of them into the car and took them to a thrift store that sold used appliances.
In the back, we found one.
It had a piece of cardboard taped to it with thick marker:
$60. AS IS.
I stood there for a second, staring at it.
Then I nodded.
“Alright,” I said. “Let’s take it.”
It wasn’t perfect. But it was what we could afford.
And at that point…
it felt like enough.