Anugrah Kumar, Christian
Post
Dawn Loggins was abandoned by her drug-abusing parents and left homeless at age 15, and had no choice but to clean the floor of her North Carolina high school to make a living. But days before she graduated from the school last week, she received a letter from Harvard University saying she had been accepted.
Dawn Loggins was abandoned by her drug-abusing parents and left homeless at age 15, and had no choice but to clean the floor of her North Carolina high school to make a living. But days before she graduated from the school last week, she received a letter from Harvard University saying she had been accepted.
“I’ll work two hours before
school. And then I’ll go to school. And then I’ll come back and work two hours
after school,” Dawn, who graduated from Burns High School in Cleveland County,
N.C., last Thursday, told CBS News.
Dawn, 18, spent years in
homes with little or no water and electricity with her drug dealer stepfather
and unemployed mother. Her stepdad would often be arrested, and they would have
to move from place to place. “Or my mom would use rent money to bail him out of
jail,” she recalled. “There would be places where we lived where there wouldn’t
be power and water for extended periods of time.”
When Dawn was at middle
school, she would visit her grandmother often. But even her home had trash all
over. “She never really explained to me like that it was important to shower,
it was important to take care of yourself. So I would go months at a time
without showering. I would wear the same dress to school for months at a time.”
Other students began to
call her ugly and would tease boys saying she had a crush on them. She would go
home every day and just cry.
Last summer, Dawn’s parents
moved to Tennessee without her and remained incommunicado. “I could never get
in touch with them. Every time I tried calling them, it said, ‘This number has
been temporarily disconnected,’” she recalled.
The teen moved from couch
to couch until a counselor asked a school custodian if she would take Dawn in.
Teachers also joined in to help and support her, and she began to excel.
Circumstances couldn’t turn
Dawn into a pessimist about life. “I looked around at my family and I saw the
neglect, the drug abuse, the bad choices and I saw my family living from
paycheck to paycheck, and I just made a decision that I was not going to end up
like my parents,” she told WBTV. “I wasn’t going to end up having to decide
should I buy food this month or should I pay my rent.”
She didn’t even turn bitter
about her parents. “I just realize that they have their own problems that they
need to work through,” HLNtv.com quoted her as saying. “They love me; I know
they love me. They just don’t show it in a way that most people would see as
normal.”
Dawn wants to return the
favor she received from the community to others who might need help. As her
inspiring story hit the national headlines, Dawn received some donations, and
she intends to use it to support needy students.
What’s more, Dawn says she
believes in hard work. She will continue to mop and broom at Burns High School
through the summer to help pay for college. Harvard will pay for tuition and
boarding, but she will need to pay for textbooks, school materials and other
expenses.
“All the help in the world
isn’t going to do you any good if you’re not willing to work hard,” she told
Fox News. “I think people were so willing to help me because they saw that I
was reaching for my goals, and I wasn’t going to let anything stop me.”
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