“It made me so sad,” he recalls. “I felt helpless and it really affected my life. My grades went down and I isolated myself from people. I didn’t trust anyone and
didn’t want to get close to anyone.”
When Abraham was 11, his mother, Sandy, finally left the home. After staying in a long string of hotels and shelters, in May 2021, they finally turned to Hope Gardens for long-term help. “
It was hard at first,” he admits. “I didn’t want to be here at all. I was nervous and I didn’t open up or talk to anyone. It took a few weeks, but eventually I made a couple of friends.”
The turning point came when he attended a summer camp for the kids at Hope Gardens. “That was the first time I felt happy,” he says. “I made all kinds of new friends, and I started to trust them. Now I consider them my brothers and sisters. That was also the first time I learned about God. They taught me that God is always with me and my mom, no matter what. Then they prayed for me, and I just started crying. Jesus changed my life. When I got back, my mom and I started going to church and we started praying more.
Since coming to Hope Gardens, Abraham has let his emotional walls down and has opened up to staff and other people here. He says he sees big changes in his mom, as well. They both feel safe and happy, and they have a whole new relationship.
“I’m 15 now, and I thank God, because when we needed His help, He brought us to Hope Gardens,” he says. “I’ve learned that sometimes life happens and I can’t change the past. All I can do is give everything to God, keep praying, and keep moving forward. If I could talk to a donor who made this
possible for my mom and me, I’d just say, ‘Thank you and God bless you. Because of you, I found myself, I found God, and I found a future.’”