The Girl Next Door
The Girl Next Door
Like a lot of little girls her age, nine-year-old Bailey enjoys school and soccer practice. She is a great student who loves to read and write. She never misses Sunday school. And she is a great big sister to Keara (4) and Drake (3).
![]() |
|
| Bailey (l) with brother Drake and sister Keara. |
But each morning, as Bailey grabs her backpack and heads to school, her heart carries the unimaginable burdens of the past year. Last fall, Bailey was the one who discovered that her uncle had died from an overdose — right on her family’s kitchen table. Her beloved grandmother passed away this spring. Her dad and his cousin (dad to Keara and Drake) are incarcerated, their crimes splashed across the front pages of the local small-town newspaper. Because of this, Bailey’s last name — “Bible” — is “the worst last name in town,” her mom Tasha explains. Ironically, “if you have the name Bible, people think you are trash.”
Bailey is even excluded from some play dates. “If your dad loved you, he’d be here,” her classmates taunt this sweet, innocent little girl.
A Christmas to Remember!
So how does Bailey go to school each day with a smile on her face? How do Keara and Drake cope each day without their dad? “I’m doing all I can to break the cycle in my children’s lives,” Tasha says, “[but] I struggle all year to provide for all four of us.” Which is why Angel Tree means so much to this hurting family.
“Angel Tree gave my children a Christmas to remember,” Tasha shares. “When my son said, ‘My dad got me these!’ — it was priceless. You gave my children love from their father and you gave me a bigger gift: the gift of hope.”
“For one minute, we felt normal,” Tasha continues. “Their dad told me Angel Tree made him feel like a human.” And Bailey? Her answer to school bullies lies carefully tucked into her backpack . . . a precious letter from her daddy telling her how much he loves and misses her.
Going Beyond Christmas
Continue your Angel Tree ministry year-round and God will use your church to help these children and their families grow in their faith, strengthen their relationships with imprisoned parents, and fulfill the purposes that God has for their lives.
Camping
Camp can be one of the most life-changing experiences that children of incarcerated parents can have. more
Mentoring
Studies show that mentoring by a caring adult is the most effective strategy for building character and curbing destructive behavior. more
