It's easy to look at the woman in the elevator at the children's hospital with one child in a wheelchair, and the other screaming because she doesn't want to get on the elevator, while also carrying braces and a walker in her hands. It's easy to look at her and think, "Wow, she's got her hands full!" But you never say it out loud. Because maybe she does have her hands full. Maybe her hands are more than full and you have no idea what she's been through. Maybe her hands are full, but underneath all of it, she's dealing with her own health problems. She's fighting to get her son an equal opportunity for education. She's dealing with the lies and rumors that have made their way around, and try to convince her that she doesn't deserve her kids. It's easy to think she must be overwhelmed. She works full time at an entry level job. What you don't know when you say to that woman that she "has her hands full", is how m...