Marleen Brooks found a note waiting for her when she got to her home in Park Hills, Mo., one evening last year. She had never heard of Wanda Mills, but her heart broke when she read the handwritten plea.
“Would you consider to become my friend,” said the note from Mills. “I’m 90 years old — live alone and all my friends have passed away. I am so lonesome and scared. Please — I pray for some one.”
Brooks is a 37-year-old property manager and she had no idea this woman even existed, but the address was for a house across the street from her and just a couple of doors down. She didn’t know anyone even lived there.
The next day, Brooks and a friend took cupcakes and went to visit Mills. (See the photo below.) The friends spent about an hour with the older woman. They found out Mills had lived in the house for 51 years. Her husband was dead. Most of her remaining family was either dead or lived far away.
Living in the middle of a busy neighborhood, Mills was invisible — and lonely.

We’re neither friends nor enemies, just strangers who share the past
Society needs storytellers to help make sense of a changing world
Economic Man needs no heart, because love and God are dead
‘All animals are equal, but [deaf] animals are more equal than others’
Doing it for the children? No, they’re doing it for the TV cameras
UPDATE: After surgery, maybe I’ll eventually start feeling better
Can we find ways to separate love of home from worship of government?
Rhetoric about freedom means nothing without right to secede