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Linda Rock, a case worker at the first-month clinic, explains how she helped Cheryl. ''We talked for a long time, and then I told her what I could do for her.'' She said she had seen many welfare clients with babies. She said: ''They were afraid to go out at night, afraid they would be mugged. These women are not involved in their children's lives. They just don't know what to do about it. They don't know how to get help. It's not like a regular pregnancy. In most cases, it's the first pregnancy. So they don't know about prenatal care, they don't know about nutrition, they don't know how to educate their kids. They never had a chance to go to school. They were raised by their mothers, who didn't have the training or the time. It's a tough situation, and it's a tough place to give birth.''
During the day, when her child is at school, she works in a clothing store. This is the only job she has had since her marriage ended in divorce. Fortunately, she earns enough to pay her bills. She says that she is struggling to learn about child rearing. ''I have a 'working' life,'' she says. ''I'm just not at home. I know I need to be more in school myself.''
But she was in her own place, had her own job, and was determined to make it work for her and her son. After two weeks of paid work, she went into a ''safe house'' in Boston where she could be sure of her son's safety and well-being.
And she started to write. Not to me, her little girl. Not to her psychiatrist, who now does home visits. She started to write to other mothers with low-income single mothers. Like her, they were struggling to do the best for their children. She became a mother to mothers. A professional writer, she began to share her experiences and the wisdom she had gained, first in the Family Circle magazine, then in the Boston Globe, The Boston Herald, and finally, in the New York Times. The Herald paid her for her first piece, titled ''The Single Mother's Survival Guide,'' a chronicle of her struggles. The Family Circle paid her $300 for a second piece. And after The New York Times picked up the story she began to write a piece each week for them. The paper has paid her $1,500 since she first appeared in the paper, doing stories on her work with the day-care center, on her volunteer work, and on her writing, which will be published by Riverhead Books.
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