To Read
When You're Alone
~~ Mike Staver ~~
"Chicken
Soup for the Mother's Soul"
I was 13 years old. My family had
moved to Southern California from North Florida a
year before. I hit adolescence with a vengence. I
was angry and rebellious, with little regard for
anything my parents had to say, particularly if
it had to do with me. Like so many teenagers, I
struggled to escape from anything that didn't
agree with my picture of the world. A
"brilliant without need of guidance"
kid, I rejected any overt offering of love. In
fact, I got angry at the mention of the word love.
One night, after a particularly
difficult day, I stormed into my room, shut the
door and got into bed. As I lay down in the
privacy of my bed, my hands slipped under my
pillow. There was an envelope. I pulled it out
and on the envelope it said, "To read
when you're alone."
Since I was alone, no one would
know whether I read it or not, so I opened it. It
said, "Mike, I know life is hard right
now, I know you are frustrated and I know we
don't do everything right. I also know that I
love you completely and nothing you do or say
will ever change that. I am here for you if you
ever need to talk, and if you don't, that's okay.
Just know that no matter where you go or what you
do in your life, I will always love you and be
proud that you are my son. I'm here for you and I
love you--that will never change. Love,
Mom."
That was the first of several
"To read when you're alone" letters.
They were never mentioned until I was an adult.
Today, I travel the world helping
people. I was in Sarasota, Florida, teaching a
seminar when, at the end of the day, a lady came
up to me and shared the difficulty she was having
with her son. We walked out to the beach, and I
told her of my mom's undying love and about the
"To read when you're alone" letters.
Several weeks later, I got a card that said she
had written her first letter and left it for her
son.
That night as I went to bed, I put
my hands under my pillow and remembered the
relief I felt every time I got a letter. In the
midst of my turbulent teen years, the letters
were the calm assurance that I could be loved in
spite of me, not because of me. Just before I
fell asleep I thanked God that my mom knew what
I, an angry teenager, needed.
Today when the seas of life get
stormy, I know that just under my pillow there is
that calm assurance that love--consistent,
abiding, unconditional love--changes lives.

"Chicken Soup for the
Mother's Soul"
© 2001 Jack Canfield,
Mark Victor Hansen, Jennifer Read
Hawthorne, Marci Shimoff "Chicken
Soup for the Mother's Soul...101 Stories
to Open the Hearts and Rekindle the
Spirits of Mothers".
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