Growing up, she never questioned it. To her, it was just another part of childhood she assumed every family shared. But the moment she mentioned it to her friends as an adult, the room went silent — and then the laughter started.
She wasn’t joking.
She remembers standing beside her mother in their tiny bathroom while her mom rolled up her sleeves, rinsed dirty cloth diapers in the toilet, squeezed out the water by hand, and tossed them into a diaper pail like it was the most normal routine in the world.
There were no fancy disposable diapers, no sanitizing machines, no odor-proof bins.
Just a toilet, strong stomach, and a mother doing whatever it took to get through long days and even longer nights.
But when she recently told her friends the story, they refused to believe her.
“There’s no way she did that. You made that up.”
“Nobody rinses diapers like that!”
She just smiled — because she knew the truth.
What they didn’t understand was that millions of mothers once lived that exact reality. Cloth diapers were washed, wrung out, reused, and scrubbed clean because that’s what families did. It wasn’t weird. It wasn’t shocking. It was survival, love, and hard work wrapped into one messy routine.
And the more she thought about it, the more she realized something:
Her mom wasn’t strange.
Her mom was strong.
A woman who did whatever it took to raise her children — even when it meant dealing with things her friends today can’t imagine.
And that’s the part of the story she’ll always carry with pride.