Everything Hangs in This Moment
By Annette Camp
June 18, 2025
He sat on the edge of the bench
wood hard beneath him.
Men shuffled in and out,
sentences trailing behind them:
time, fines - one word
enough to change everything.
He waited.
Back straight.
Hands clenched in his lap,
gripping the outline of hope.
Don’t unravel.
Then, his name echoed through the chamber.
As his mother silently pleaded:
Don’t lock him away from the very soil
that’s just beginning to ground him.
Let him keep building the life
that now calls to him
of second chances.
She wanted the judge to see
the man he was trying to become,
not just the moment of his worst mistake.
She had watched him fall
hard and often, but she had
also seen him rise in rehab.
Don’t take this from him,
she begged with her bones.
Not now.
Not when he’s growing like
the agriculture around him.
Let him keep his place at Harvest Farms
not because he’s earned it yet,
but because he’s trying.
Because he’s showing up every day
when it would be easier to run.
She wanted the judge to see
the quiet miracle of him
showing up each day to do
his work from the inside out.
He stood when his name was called.
Not confident,
but not crumbling either.
Each step forward
was its own small vow:
I’m not who I was.
Not anymore.
He didn’t glance back,
but if he had,
he would’ve seen her—
his mother,
anchored in stillness.
He would have seen in her eyes
not fear,
not pity,
but belief.
The kind that doesn’t waver
when the world does.
She carried it for him.
After the public defender
stated that he had started
the New Life rehab
program, the judge said,
“That’s a great program.”
Those words felt like
more than mercy.
It was a lifeline.
My sincere hope was that the judge saw that the New Life was doing a far better job of helping to turn his life around than jail or prison ever could.
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