My in-laws tried to quietly expel my dad from my wedding because he is a garbage collector. They said it was for “appearances.” I was shaking with anger when my dad calmly asked for the microphone… and the room never recovered from what he said.
My name is ak Anna, and the man who raised me works for the city.
My dad, Joe, has been a garbage collector for as long as I can remember. Sanitation department, garbage collection—whatever you call it, he’s been doing it since I was a toddler.
My mom died when I was three years old. Cancer took her quickly—one day she was there, the next she was in the hospital, and then she was gone. No warning. No time to prepare.

After that, it was just Dad and me in a small two-bedroom apartment on the south side of town. The radiator clanked in winter, the windows stuck in summer, but the rent was stable, and we made it work. We didn’t have much, but we always had enough.
The heat stayed on. The lights worked. There was always food—sometimes just pasta with butter, sometimes scrambled eggs for dinner—but there was always something.
Dad left for work at 4:30 every morning. I’d hear the door close softly, feel the apartment shift as he tried not to wake me. By the time I got up for school, he’d already been working for hours.
He came home smelling of metal, exhaust, sweat, and something I couldn’t name but always recognized. His hands were calloused, his back hurt most nights, and some evenings he barely spoke because exhaustion had drained every word out of him.
But he never missed a parent-teacher conference. Never forgot my birthday. Never once made me feel like I was too much, too hard, or not worth it.