When I was a freshman in college I was approached by a friend of a friend to help her rent a car. She claimed they needed a credit card to be on the account in case of damage. Turned out that she was still under 21 and couldnโt rent the car herself, which was why she needed someone older or with a card on file.
I didnโt think much of it. She was bubbly, kind of loud, had that natural charm that made you trust her even if you didnโt know why. Her name was Kendra. She said itโd only be for a weekend trip, nothing fancy, just heading out of town for a wedding. I figured, โWhatโs the worst that could happen?โ
I let her use my credit card, went with her to the rental place, signed the documents, and watched her drive off with a car that I technically was responsible for. I even laughed a little, thinking Iโd done something cool, something โcollege,โ like I was part of a bigger adult world.
Then I didnโt hear from her.
For three days, no calls, no texts, nothing. When I tried reaching out, her number was suddenly โno longer in service.โ I called the friend who introduced usโMicahโand he just said, โWeird, she was supposed to be back yesterday.โ That was it.
On the fifth day, I got a call from the rental company. The car was found abandoned three cities over, with scratches all over the side, a busted headlight, and an empty tank. They asked me to come in immediately.
My stomach sank.
The damages were over $1,200, and my card was automatically charged because Iโd signed the papers. My bank account went negative, and I had no idea how to even begin looking for her. I filed a police report, but since I had willingly rented the car, they told me it wasnโt a criminal case. More like a civil issue. โGood luck with that,โ one officer even said, almost mockingly.
I was nineteen. Broke. Embarrassed. Angry.
I had to pick up two part-time jobsโlate-night shift at a gas station and weekend shifts at a bookstoreโto pay off the card. For a while, I couldnโt even afford meals on campus. I ate crackers and peanut butter for lunch, skipped breakfast most days, and stopped going out with friends. I became quiet, withdrawn.
But hereโs the thing.
Working those two jobs forced me to grow up fast. At the gas station, I met a guy named Darren who was saving up for his motherโs surgery. He had a calmness about him that balanced out my anger. At the bookstore, I met a retired teacher named Miss Janice who volunteered there just because she loved books and people. Sheโd bring me muffins and tea, sensing that I wasnโt eating well.
They became like my anchor.
Darren taught me how to let go of resentment, saying, โSome people are just here to teach us lessons, even if itโs the hard way.โ Miss Janice encouraged me to write about what happened, saying, โYouโve got a story in you. Might as well make it worth something.โ
And so I started journaling. Every night after my shifts, Iโd sit by the dorm window and write what I felt. Sometimes it was just rage. Other times it was gratitude. Eventually, the writing helped me process everything. I stopped blaming myself as much.
About six months later, I was at the grocery store when I saw herโKendra.
She had her back to me, arguing with the cashier about a return. I froze. My heart raced. I didnโt know whether to confront her or just leave. But something in me said: No. You deserve closure.
I waited until she walked outside, then followed her to the parking lot.
โKendra,โ I said, trying to keep my voice steady.
She turned, and for a second, she didnโt recognize me. Then her face shiftedโrecognition, then guilt, then that fake cheer she always had.
โOh my God, hey! Long timeโโ
โDonโt,โ I said. โYou know what you did.โ
She sighed, then said something I didnโt expect: โIโm sorry.โ
Just like that.
She admitted she panicked. Said she was behind on school payments, desperate, and needed the car to help a guy she was dating move to another city. He ended up ghosting her, and she ditched the car, figuring the rental company would just โhandle it.โ
She claimed she didnโt have the money to pay me back but wanted to. She gave me her new number and said, โI know it doesnโt fix it, but Iโm not that person anymore.โ
I didnโt believe her. But I kept the number.
Weeks passed. Then one day, I got a message from her. It was a screenshot of a Venmo transferโ$100. Then another the next week. Every month, for nearly a year, she paid me back in chunks. Sometimes only $25, sometimes $150 when she could.
It wasnโt about the money anymore.
What mattered was that she tried.
Eventually, we met up again. Not as friends, but more likeโฆ people who shared a strange chapter in each otherโs lives. She told me sheโd dropped out of college for a while, worked retail, started going to therapy, and was trying to fix the bridges sheโd burned.
โI donโt expect forgiveness,โ she said. โBut I do want to stop running.โ
And you know what? I respected that.
We didnโt become close. But I did forgive her. Not for herโbut for me.
By then, I had paid off the credit card, saved a little extra, and even gotten a scholarship based on an essay Iโd written about resilience. The essay? It was my journal story. Miss Janice helped me edit it. Darren read it and said, โNow thatโs how you make lemonade.โ
Fast forward three years, and life looks completely different now.
Iโm in my final year of college. Iโm interning at a nonprofit that helps students from low-income backgrounds understand credit, contracts, and basic financial literacyโsomething I really couldโve used back then.
And hereโs the twist I never saw coming.
Last month, I got an email from the scholarship board. They were creating a new annual fund for students who had overcome financial challenges during their education. They asked if Iโd let them name it after the essay Iโd written: โThe Favor That Nearly Ruined Me.โ
I laughed out loud. Then I cried.
That dumb mistake? That naive moment? It had turned into something that would help other students avoid what I went through.
The irony wasnโt lost on me. The car that nearly drove me off a cliff (figuratively) had ended up steering my life into a better direction.
And guess who showed up at the scholarship ceremony? Kendra.
She stood quietly at the back, didnโt make a scene, just clapped when my name was called. Afterward, she came up to me and said, โI applied for a night school program. Your story helped me realize Iโm not broken forever.โ
Sometimes, life throws us people who seem like disasters at first glance. But every now and then, theyโre just mirrors showing us where we need to grow.
I still think about those peanut butter crackers I used to eat in silence, and how even though I was hungry and bitter, I was learning.
Learning how to survive.
Learning how to forgive.
Learning how to take a mistake and turn it into a stepping stone.
So hereโs the lesson Iโll leave you with:
Not every betrayal ends in bitterness. Some end in breakthrough. If youโve ever been used, lied to, or left behindโjust know it might one day be the very thing that builds your story. That refines your heart. That gives you something worth telling the world.
And hey, maybe someone out there needs to hear your story too.
If this reminded you of anything youโve been throughโor gave you a bit of hopeโlike it, share it, and pass it on.
You never know whoโs sitting in silence, trying to survive off crackers and broken trust, just waiting for a reason to believe again.



