‘A purpose in this world’: Older adults fear elimination of program that helps them find work

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By Anna Claire Vollers, Stateline.org

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — Mike Leslie, 66, sits at a desk beneath the buzz of fluorescent office lights, his fingers hovering over his new laptop keyboard. He smiles, eyes crinkling beneath a worn baseball cap. It’s a place he never imagined he’d be sitting.

Before last year, he’d never used a computer.

For most of his life, Leslie hadn’t needed one. He spent 36 years in pipe manufacturing near his North Alabama hometown, in jobs that included welding, driving forklifts, mixing concrete and running crews as a foreman. The work was hard and physical, but he didn’t mind.

Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Layoffs followed.

Leslie found himself looking for a job to make ends meet, at an age when more affluent men might think of retiring. He was no longer suited for manufacturing work. But he also lacked experience with the technology that now powers even the most basic tasks in nearly every modern workplace, such as the internet, email and Microsoft Office.

“A lot of people think old people are obsolete, but they’re not,” he said. “There’s a lot of knowledge in their heads. They just need the opportunity to get it out and learn new things.”

His life’s unexpected second act began in late 2023, thanks to an obscure state-federal initiative called the Senior Community Service Employment Program. For people ages 55 and older with low incomes, it provides paid part-time work at local nonprofits and government agencies such as libraries, senior centers and the Red Cross. Its on-the-job training is meant to prepare participants to transition into permanent jobs.

But 700 miles away in Washington, D.C., Congress is considering axing the funding for the very program that has made this new chapter of Leslie’s life possible. In his budget for the coming fiscal year, President Donald Trump has recommended eliminating this and some other programs that fall under the Older Americans Act, a landmark 1965 law that provides social and meal services for older people. The U.S. House also proposed eliminating the employment program’s funding, while the Senate proposed keeping it.

At this point, experts say, anything is possible.

Advocates fear that the loss of this program, which serves about 50,000 older adults nationwide, could affect not just participants like Leslie, but also stretch further into communities, removing tens of thousands of employees from local libraries, city recreation facilities and senior centers.

Isolated and unsure

Sitting at home post-layoff, Leslie felt isolated and unsure about what to do next. A friend told him about the job program, and he eventually decided to apply. He got in.

Now he helps manage the fleet of vehicles at the Top of Alabama Regional Council of Governments, a multicounty agency based in Huntsville that provides support services to older Americans and people with disabilities. As part of the program, he enrolled in a digital certification program that provided him with a laptop, prepaid internet access and a 10-week education course that taught him the basics of the Microsoft Office suite, email, internet, social media and other skills.

For Leslie, it’s been a foothold into a workforce that felt like it had moved on without him.

“You’ve got purpose,” he says, “getting up every morning, coming to a job you like.”

He’s a favorite around the office, where everyone calls him “Mr. Mike.”

In April, he wore a three-piece suit to the officewide celebration where he received a graduation certificate for acing his digital skills courses. He made his co-workers cry as he told them about how the program had given him his confidence back.

‘Lost in D.C.’

On a recent Wednesday afternoon, in a conference room not far from Leslie’s desk, some of his managers at the Top of Alabama Regional Council of Governments, known as TARCOG, were sitting around a table discussing what to do.

It had been a chaotic few months. TARCOG is responsible for administering many services for older people, from Meals on Wheels to transportation, caregiver support to services that prevent abuse and exploitation.

Earlier this year, the Trump administration began to dismantle the federal agency responsible for overseeing such services, while his proposed federal budget recommended cutting or freezing spending on them, including the employment program.

Michelle Jordan, TARCOG’s executive director, had been fielding questions from local leaders who were aghast that Meals on Wheels might be canceled. Across the country, national and local advocates at similar agencies sounded the alarm. In some states, local groups like TARCOG have reported delays in receiving federal funds they were promised.

Earlier this month, the Trump administration reversed course and recommended that most of the programs for older adults continue under a new federal agency.

“These are people who worked hard all their lives. But they can’t pay the heating bill. They have to decide between medicine and groceries.”– Nancy Robertson, former executive director of the Top of Alabama Regional Council of Governments

But a few of the Older Americans Act programs would be left without funding. One of the largest is the senior employment program.

“These are real people, and I think that gets lost in D.C.,” said Sheila Dessau-Ivey, who directs the aging programs at TARCOG. “They just see programs and dollars, and say, ‘Well, we don’t need these.’ But those dollars are actually attached to a human life.”

The Senior Community Service Employment Program is a tiny fraction of the size of budgetary behemoths such as Medicaid and Medicare. Its budget is about $400 million and it serves about 50,000 older people nationwide each year. Eighty-six of those slots — including Leslie’s — are in the five-county swath of North Alabama served by TARCOG.

To qualify under the nationwide Senior Community Service Employment Program, a person must be at least 55 years old, unemployed, and have a family income of no more than 125% of the federal poverty level. For an individual, that’s currently$19,562 a year. Veterans are given priority in the program, as are people with disabilities, rural residents, people over age 65 and those experiencing homelessness. Funding comes mainly through the U.S. Department of Labor.

“We’ve had workers who were homeless when they started this program,” Jordan said. Past research found about 3 in 5 participants nationally reported being homeless or at risk of homelessness.

“You forget there are people living with us, sitting next to us in church, going to the grocery store with us, who just don’t have those skills or that confidence,” she said.

And it has an outsize impact on other vulnerable groups. In 2019, about two-thirds of participants were women, and about 44% were Black, according to research. A majority of participants reported having a high school diploma or less.

“These are people who worked hard all their lives, but they can’t pay the heating bill,” said Nancy Robertson, TARCOG’s retired former executive director, who’d come into the office to lend her experience to the group discussing how to advocate for funding.

“They have to decide between medicine and groceries.”

The program participants aren’t the only ones that would be hurt by the loss of the program, she said.

Participants can stay in the program up to four years. While they’re there, they provide more than 40 million hours of work to public and nonprofit agencies across the nation. The agencies and community groups that hire the participants — with salaries paid by the program — would lose those employees. An employee working in a small-town library, for example, might be the only reason the library is able to remain open for certain hours.

In Huntsville, the local senior center would lose 14 of its employees if the employment program closes. Across town at a community rec center, a beloved 91-year-old receptionist would lose the job she trained for.

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Congressional chaos

The U.S. population is aging rapidly. In 2003, about 1 in 7 people in the U.S. labor force was 55 or older. By 2023, that share was nearly 1 in 4. One of the looming challenges for lawmakers and community advocates is how to keep older people healthy and thriving.

As Republicans consider adding work requirements to programs like Medicaid, cutting funding for a work program designed to help older people doesn’t make sense, said Marci Phillips, director of public policy and advocacy at the National Council on Aging, a nonprofit organization focused on issues that affect older adults.

“If people age 55 and older have to show they’re working to qualify for Medicaid, but [lawmakers] are cutting the federal program to help workers age 55 and older, there’s a disconnect there,” she said.

Some lawmakers question the usefulness of the program. In 2019, only about 38% of participants who exited the program were employed a few months later, according to a 2022 study. That share was below the U.S. Department of Labor’s goal of 42%. Median earnings were also below federal goals.

Phillips said the program shouldn’t be judged by the metrics that are used to measure whether a traditional workforce development program is succeeding.

“These are older adults who have to work, but the realities of their health and their caregiving situations aren’t changing,” she said. “It’s a standard that doesn’t really recognize the population we’re trying to serve.”

Programs that are funded under the Older Americans Act are discretionary, meaning Congress can’t cut or eliminate them in the reconciliation bill that’s currently before the Senate and that has generated public outcry over potential cuts to programs including Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly known as food stamps.

Trump has recommended eliminating funding for the employment program, but ultimately its fate lies in the hands of Congress.

The U.S. House is scheduled to take up the appropriations bill that provides funding for these programs the week of July 20. The Senate’s plans are less certain, as its members remain focused on Trump’s reconciliation bill, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. And it’s conceivable, Phillips said, that Congress may instead pass a continuing resolution, a temporary measure that keeps the government funded at current levels.

For his part, Leslie would like to travel to Washington to testify before Congress. If anyone understands the needs of older Americans, he figures, it’s them.

“Society looks at older people as not useful, but if you look at the people in Congress, they’re old folks too,” Leslie said. “If you’re old, why would you not want another older person to have something, to learn something?”

Future possibilities

Leslie is studying to earn his license as a private investigator. It’s a job he’s always wanted, and now he feels like he has the skills he needs to chase that dream.

He’s also trying to organize a workshop this fall to be held at his church, Beaver Dam Primitive Baptist, where he hopes he and some of his TARCOG co-workers can share about services and programs available to help older adults.

“We’ve got 26 churches in our association, so we’ve reached out to all of them, saying there’s these things you need to know about,” Leslie said. “If I had known about some of this stuff when my dad was living, he may have had a better quality of life.”

He doesn’t know if his own program will be one of those still available by then, but he’s hopeful.

He believes the biggest reward has been less tangible than the modest paycheck and newfound computer skills, but more profound: The sense that his life has opened back up, full of possibilities.

“Senior citizens have a purpose in this world, and we can’t think that because they’re old we can just throw them away,” Leslie said. “They’ve still got knowledge. I think we should give them every chance to succeed.”

©2025 States Newsroom. Visit at stateline.org. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Wild ship Freddy Gaudreau to Seattle for a draft pick

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With the NHL Draft this weekend and free agency opening next week, there is an expectation that the Minnesota Wild roster could soon look notably different than was bounced out of the playoffs in six games this spring.

That potential transformation started Thursday when general manager Bill Guerin sent veteran forward Freddy Gaudreau to the Seattle Kraken for a 4th-round pick in this weekend’s NH: Draft.

It was likely a move to free up $2.1 million from next season’s payroll more than anything. Gaudreau, who turned 32 on the day Vegas ended the Wild’s season, was one of the rare players who appeared in all 82 regular season games, in a year where injuries came fast and furious. His 18 goals, while playing primarily in a 2nd- or 3rd-line role, were one shy of Gaudreau’s career best, although he appeared in all six playoff games without recording a point.

In exchange, Minnesota receives the 102nd overall selection, giving the Wild five picks when Rounds 2-7 are announced. They do not have a first-rounder, and are on the clock to pick 52nd overall in the second round on Saturday morning.

Well-liked in the locker room and among the Minnesota fan base, Gaudreau spent four years with the Wild having previously played three years for Nashville and one for Pittsburgh. In 2023 he signed a five-year contract extension worth $2.1 million per season and has three years remaining on that deal.

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Twins star Royce Lewis will DH for Saints in rehab assignment

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It appears that star third baseman Royce Lewis is getting closer to returning to the Twins lineup.

After running the bases on Thursday morning at Target Field before the Twins were set to take on the Seattle Mariners, Lewis is expected to serve as the designated hitter for the St. Paul Saints on Friday night against Louisville at CHS Field.

The rehab assignment is a step in the right direction as Lewis continues to recover from a left hamstring strain. He suffered the injury a couple of weeks ago late in a game against the Houston Astros, and while he’s technically eligible to come off the injured list at any time, the Twins want to make sure he’s back at full strength before activating him.

Asked about how Lewis has handled everything, manager Rocco Baldelli seemed encouraged by his progress.

“He’s in a good spot right now,” Baldelli said. “This is what we were probably hoping for when it first happened. This was pretty close to an ideal situation to this point. We still treat it as a guy recovering and that’s why he’s going on a rehab assignment.”

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Travel: How to receive the royal treatment in Morocco

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Here’s looking at you, kid. I mean, Your Majesty.

In the real Casablanca — not the acclaimed 1942 Oscar-winning movie — I soaked like a queen in a rose petal-strewn warm bath at the Art Deco glamorous Royal Mansour hotel owned by, ahem …  Morocco’s King Mohammed VI.

King Mohammed VI’s photo is displayed in the Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay hotel he owns. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

Earlier in my same regal suite, I nobly nibbled a gratis inches-tall M-shaped chocolate (etched with “Royal Mansour”) and watched apricot skies envelope a distant iconic mosque. The interior of the 24-story hotel opulently shone with 70 different kinds of polished marble, and the air (along with everything from complimentary SPF 15 hand cream to provided pashmina shawls) whiffed of the signature Royal Mansour scent fleur d’ oranger, the favorite of another monarch, Louis XIV.

However, the five-star haven was not stuck-up at all. From the general manger to the multiple uniformed doormen (the bellhop looked fab in a retro cherry-red outfit), everyone invariably touched one hand to their chest as a cultural goodwill gesture while brightly smiling and greeting guests by name. Every time I alighted from the hotel’s chauffeured electric Mercedes-Benz to a welcoming chorus, I felt like I was entering a super-classy  “Cheers,” although this hangout had 600 Bohemian crystal fish twirling from the vaulted ceiling of the gilded lobby.

Everybody knows your name at the friendly Royal Mansour Casablanca hotel. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

My stay was just the first aristocratic accommodation. After Casablanca, I traveled by train to the coast of this Islamic North African nation and the Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay, also owned by Morocco’s crowned head and right next door to his guarded, expansive summer digs. From my beachfront resort, I’d set off to explore the twisted alleys of two historic medinas, including the UNESCO-listed Tetouan where present-day tunic-cloaked shoppers perused mounds of produce and butchers slit live chickens’ throats.

Starring in Casablanca

The grand lobby of the king-owned Royal Mansour Casablanca includes a combo aquarium-terrarium containing over 1,000 fish from the Amazon and Asia. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

With the stated aim of boosting tourism, Morocco’s 61-year-old sovereign opened both of my zellige-tiled Royal Mansour lodgings last year. The billionaire lords over a vast personal business empire but his only other hotel, the exquisite Royal Mansour Marrakech, debuted back in 2010. (FYI, Mansour means “victorious” in Arabic.)  As for the country, King Mohammed VI governs alongside an elected parliament but wields enormous power.

“He is known as the ‘King of the Poor,’” my Casablanca guide Naima Boussaid explained. “He does a lot for education and single mothers and helping the underprivileged so people love him.”

The massive Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca can accommodate 25,000 worshippers indoors and another 80,000 in the outside courtyard. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

Naima, a dynamo Muslim mom of two adult daughters, wore lime green hightop Converse (“I have all the colors”), a lime green hijab scarf over her hair, a red baseball cap emblazoned, “Morocco,” a rainbow-toned hooded long djellaba, and a hefty Hand of Fatima silver pendant “that protects against the evil eye.” We strolled through the gargantuan, ornate Hassan II Mosque erected by the king’s late father and completed in 1993. “Three daily shifts each of 5,000 artisans spent six years round-the-clock working on it,” Naima said with awe. The 60-story minaret (second tallest in the world) is topped by a laser that beams 18 miles over the Atlantic towards Mecca and assists ships in the dark.

Hand-sculpted marble walls, detailed carvings and mosaics, white granite columns and Murano glass chandeliers create the Hassan II Mosque’s striking interior in Casablanca. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

Before day’s end, Naima had given me her secret tagine stew recipe, brought me to buy the Moroccan 35-spice blend ras el hanout, and dramatically pantomimed over her clothes how I should vigorously scrub myself in a hammam with gooey black soap. Plus, in the newer whitewashed medina, she complimented a stranger in Arabic, and in a snap he had invited us into his traditional family home to sit among customary piles of beautiful pillows covered in vibrant textiles. (Moroccans are extremely hospitable.)

“You know the No. 1 one reason why people know Casablanca?” Naima later asked referring to Morocco’s frenetic financial capital. “The movie. Although it was all filmed in Hollywood.” She chuckled. (“Casablanca” was entirely shot on a Warner Bros. backlot in Burbank, except for one scene filmed at nearby Van Nuys Airport).

Rick’s Cafe in Casablanca will have you reminiscing about Bogie from “Casablanca.” Think of him when you’re slurping Champagne-permeated oysters in the real restaurant. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

Of course, in the city Casablanca, I had to visit Rick’s Cafe, founded in 2004 by an American woman who retired as a counselor for the U.S. Embassy in Morocco and adored the Humphrey Bogart-Ingrid Bergman romantic drama. When I walked up to Rick’s early afternoon, a stern suited doorman wearing blue-mirrored sunglasses conferred with someone through his two-way earpiece radio, before I was led inside to an upstairs alcove of the film-fond restaurant. In this cozy room, the black-and-white “Casablanca” played on a screen, a vintage roulette table took center stage, and nostalgic Bogie and Bergman posters adorned the walls. I had it all to myself — including the only three barstools — until a congenial waiter in a red fez hat materialized to take my chardonnay order.

Time goes by in Rick’s Cafe. The restaurant-bar in Casablanca pays homage to the classic “Casablanca” film that was shot a world away in Burbank. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

(Note that drinking alcohol is forbidden in the Islam religion so only certain licensed establishments can serve booze, mainly hotels and tourist restaurants.)

The Royal Mansour offers various curated excursions, should you tire of cocooning in the hotel spa swaddled in “red gold” saffron harvested from Moroccan hinterlands or being hypnotized by the lobby’s aquarium-terrarium housing over 1,000 darting fish from the Amazon and Asia. (Surprisingly, room rates aren’t a king’s ransom — they start at $590 and include a full breakfast with round pats of butter embellished with the Royal Mansour’s “M” logo that also resembles a crenellated casbah gate.)

Casablanca’s eye-popping street art includes subjects ranging from women empowerment to space villains to soccer heroes to — as in this case — humongous bugs. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

Besides my tour with Naima, the concierge arranged an outing with a very cool dreadlocked nonprofit rep to admire more than 30 vivid street art murals throughout the metropolis. If you hear both French and Arabic spoken, that’s because Mohammed V, the king’s monarch grandfather, successfully fought to achieve Morocco’s independence in 1956 after it had been a protectorate of France for over 40 years. Incidentally, current King Mohammed VI —  who holds a doctorate in law and ascended to the throne in 1999 — was the first Moroccan ruler to present his princess wife to the public and, in addition, tout her charitable activities. The couple have two now-grown children and divorced in 2018.

Le Rooftop restaurant at Royal Mansour Casablanca is a front row seat to stunning sunsets. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

That evening I fell under the spell of Royal Mansour’s piece de resistance  — the 23rd-floor tantalizing Mediterranean restaurant, Le Rooftop, where on the wrap-around panoramic outdoor deck I savored asparagus-mushroom-black truffle polenta while feasting on a blazing neon sunset transforming the sprawling, legendary “White City” below. Meanwhile, in the ground-level 1950s-chic cocktail lounge, a bartender crafted chunky Royal Mansour M-shaped ice cubes to put in nightcaps.

Of all the gin joints, in all the towns …

Transported in Tamuda Bay

In north Morocco, the market in Tetouan’s old town is a vibrant slice of local life. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

In the buzzing ancient Tetouan medina, donkey carts squeezed through tangled alleys crowded with indigenous Berber women selling palm leaf-wrapped Jben cheese, fishmongers hawking slippery sardines, and live squawking chickens crammed into cages. Locals selected their feathery dinner, then its throat was slit and body plucked clean.

‘They don’t get fresher than that,” commented my guide, Nuri Abdelkhalek. Indeed the walled UNESCO World Heritage Site of Tetouan is most authentic.

The Bab Tut gate, next to a fountain built in 1755, is one of the famous entrances to Tetouan’s old medina. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

Back at my king-owned Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay, guests preferred grazing on beluga sturgeon caviar and amlou pastries designed like flowers and encrusted with edible gold. After all, we were on the Moroccan Riviera.

Sand-colored buildings are villas and suites at the luxury Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay, next to the vacation home of the hotel proprietor, King Mohammed VI. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

To get to this north coast from Casablanca, I journeyed on a two-hour high-speed train to Tangier, situated on the Strait of Gibraltar. My interesting seat mate told me he was a prayer-leading imam at a mosque in Saudi Arabia’s Mecca and for half the trip he politely tried to convert me to Islam. Although unsuccessful, he later WhatsApped me 710 pages of the Quran.

The lobby of the Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay is artistically plastered with 95,000 shells, supposedly all collected from sands in front of the hotel. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

A Royal Mansour driver met me at the Tangier station and after a 90-minute ride, I glided into the Tamuda Bay lobby only to be shell-shocked. The patterned walls were totally concocted of 95,000 seashells, supposedly all handpicked from the shore in front. I wondered about the origin claim but then outside I discovered the private half-mile stretch of beach literally blanketed, actually layered, with shells washed up from the sapphire Alboran Sea. Employees raked areas clean to make walking easier. (Continuing the marine theme, the pool bar, lamps and artwork are comprised of shells.)

Seashells completely cover sides of the pool bar at Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay on Morocco’s north coast. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

The revered king, whose portrait graces the main foyer, has long vacationed in his security-patrolled compound next door. I’m told his VIP friends and extended family have bunked at the Royal Mansour, which sits on 25 lush acres and consists of individual low-key tan-colored blocky buildings, with 55 superb contemporary suites and villas, three restaurants helmed by Michelin-starred chefs and an elaborate network of underground tunnels for personnel, such as butlers, to scurry through. (Rooms breakfast-inclusive from $682. If you want to splurge, book the hotel’s $27,000 a night, 18,000-square-foot Royal Villa, complete with its own white Steinway baby grand and a movie theater.)

Guests can lounge, swim or walk along a nearly half-mile of private beach at the laid-back, luxury Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

“We always see the king jet-skiing and sailing his black boat,” said local hiking enthusiast Zaid Habssaid, who accompanied me on a jaunt in the nearby mountains. Zaid was referring to Baldi 1, the king’s $100-million, 230-foot yacht.

I’d been to Morocco twice before, but never to this area, generally off the foreign tourist map. The Andalusian-inspired labyrinth maze of Tetouan, just 20 minutes from Tamuda Bay, was a refuge for Jews and Muslims who fled the Spanish Inquisition in the 15th century. My hotel-provided guide Nuri said the mellah quarters that once shielded thousands of Sephardic Jews is now home to just several Jewish families who reside among Muslim neighbors. (You may see street signs in Hebrew, Arabic and Spanish — for over four decades, until 1956, Tetouan served as the capital of the Spanish protectorate in north Morocco.)

An employee unrolls handmade rugs in a shop in Tetouan’s medina. Morocco is known for its traditional woven carpets. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

At one point, Nuri stopped at a placard denoting a communal oven built in the 19th century for Jews to bake bread or matzoh. Inside, the friendly Muslim owner roasted nuts to sell and insisted on giving me a handful of warm cashews. Down another narrow corridor, shopkeeper Barrack Abderazeke beckoned: “Come in. We love everyone. We are one big family.” Then, unsolicited, one by one, he unfurled 15 oversized colorful Moroccan Berber carpets, some woven from camel hair.

A signpost indicates where the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea converge off the coast of Tangier, Morocco. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

Another day, Nuri escorted me around Tangier —  to the meeting point of the  Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea, past Africa’s first pet cemetery, and on to Tangier’s centuries-old energizing medina and its casbah fortress. Behind stone ramparts, souk merchants touted items from argan oil to beldi olives to bejeweled caftans.

The “quiet pool” at Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay is intended to be a tranquil heavenly escape, mimicking the moon and stars. (Photo by Norma Meyer)

Returning to the Royal Mansour Tamuda Bay, I again soaked like a queen. Only  this night, I was alone in the hotel’s calming, dim-lit celestial indoor “quiet pool.”  A massive, hanging moon-mimicking sphere subtly glowed overhead, and somehow sparkly stars reflected on surface waters all around me, submerging my body in a magical galaxy.

This was my kingdom — for now.