There's a woman I pass almost every day on my way to the market. She stands on the roadside, bent over a pile of
vegetables, arranging them with care. Her hands move quickly, but her eyes, her eyes always look tired. Not the kind of tired that comes after a long day, but the kind that builds over years. A quiet exhaustion stitched into her bones.
She is one of the many. The unnoticed. The ones who carry the weight of cities, families, and systems-without recognition, without rest, and often, without fair reward.
We live in a world held up by invisible hands.
Everywhere you look, the most essential work is being done by the most undervalued people. The domestic workers who clean homes and raise children they didn't birth. The waste collectors who clear our streets before dawn. The farmers who bend in the sun to grow our food. The women who wake before their families and sleep last, running homes like silent engines.
They are the foundation. But we rarely speak their names. We rarely know their stories.
Why?
Because their lives don't fit into our definition of "success." Because we've built a society where worth is measured by visibility, influence, and income, not by service, sacrifice, or resilience.
Inequality isn't just about income gaps. It's about who gets remembered and who gets erased. It's about whose pain is heard and whose is dismissed as "normal!" The problem isn't that people aren't working hard enough. It's that their hard work has been normalized into silence.
During the pandemic, we clapped for essential workers. We called them heroes. But now, as the noise faded, so did our gratitude. The same nurses, sweepers, and sellers have gone back to being invisible. Their struggles remain, but our attention has moved on.
It makes you wonder,what kind of justice claps only when it's convenient?
We can't talk about community without talking about labor. And we can't talk about labor without confronting class, gender, and dignity.
Why is the work that sustains us the least paid? Why is caregiving seen as a woman's duty, not a profession? Why do we call people "unskilled" simply because their expertise isn't taught in classrooms?
I don't have all the answers. But I know that true change begins with uncomfortable questions.
We need to shift our lens. To redefine what we consider valuable. To start seeing people not for how loudly they speak, but for how much they carry.
Somewhere along the way, we stopped looking.
We became a society that celebrates the ones who shine while forgetting the ones who hold the light. But if justice means anything, it must mean this: to bring the invisible into view. To give dignity where it's long been denied. To speak not for people, but with them. And most importantly, to listen.
I think about that woman by the vegetable cart often.
She doesn't have a Linkedin profile or a powerful platform. But she teaches every day, through endurance, through patience, through quiet strength.
Maybe the future isn't about building something new. Maybe it's about finally honoring what's already there.
We all have a role to play in this.
Sometimes it's as small as saying thank you. Sometimes it's as large as demanding better policies, wages, and protections. But always, it begins with seeing. Really seeing.
Because once you see, you can't unsee.
And once you care, you begin to change the world, even if it's just one person at a time.
Posted 12/09/2025