Mercedes teen shoulders family’s needs amid health, money issues

MERCEDES — The Hernandez family sat together on one of the two brown couches inside the otherwise empty living room, save for a small fan near the far end of the room.

The walls are bare, serving as a reminder of the sacrifices made by Olga and her children to make ends meet — a seemingly uphill battle both economically and healthwise.

Olga, a single mother of four, finds it difficult to be around at all times due to a fluctuating work schedule, one that sometimes has her waking up in the middle of the night to go to work. Her shift at a Stripes convenience store sometimes begins at 3 a.m.

Olga Hernandez holds back tears as she speaks are their hardships at her home on Friday, Dec. 2, 2022, in Mercedes. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

With her eldest daughter attending school, Olga has had to rely on her eldest son, 17-year-old Alan Borjas, an 11th grader at Mercedes High School. He has assumed responsibility over his younger siblings, 12-year-old Dulce Maria Lopez and seven-year-old Edwin Lopez, and sometimes assumed the role of caretaker for his mother.

“I’m always the one asking them how school was and, ‘What did they learn today? Do they need help with anything?’” Alan said. “I’ve been called an uncle, a dad, and pretty much a brother. I really care for my family.”

Those responsibilities have sometimes interfered with his own education, resulting in him missing school sometimes to be there for his family.

“My mom is really hard-working and sometimes she really needs to stay at home and I need to be around her in case she needs anything,” he said. “I’m just here to support them.”

Olga can’t help but beam about her son.

“He’s very smart. The principal said Alan is very smart and if everyone was as bright as he is, it would be a better school,” his mother boasted. “He does that kind of work easily.”

Alan said he hopes to attend the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley after he graduates from high school. He has yet to decide on a career path, but he is leaning toward electrical or mechanical engineering.

“I really want to go to UTRGV. I’ve visited there like four times already, and stuff has been really interesting,” he said. “I just want to earn a lot of money so that I can have enough to give and enough to keep.”

Alan Borjas, 17, speaks about his responsibilities at his home on Friday, Dec. 2, 2022, in Mercedes. (Joel Martinez | [email protected])

When asked about the type of responsibilities a 17-year-old could assume that may affect his education, Alan said that it’s a sacrifice that he is willing to make.

“It’s life. We don’t really know what things could happen,” Alan said. “I’m the one that needs to take it because sometimes I do really good in school. I prefer to be the one to stay if they need my help from home. I’ll make the sacrifice.”

He has found himself in such situations more times than one might consider. Roughly three months ago, his mother was forced to undergo a surgical operation to remove a cyst from her left eye.

She went to a local doctor and an eye doctor, but she was not given any answers to what was causing her eye to become inflamed.

After paying several doctor fees and spending multiple days at home after she was advised to keep her eye away from hot places, she decided to go to Mexico where she underwent surgery to remove the cyst.

Then came the recovery process, which forced her to miss additional time from work. She said that she was fortunate to keep her job, but the time off made her fall behind on payments.

“When you get behind, you get really behind. When you have a problem, you have a lot more problems,” she said. “When it rains, it pours.”

She sold a TV that used to be in the living room, which provided some temporary relief, but she was still behind on her rent and light and water bills.

With all hope seemingly lost, Olga turned to her faith.

“One night when I was up real late around 2 a.m. I felt so desperate. ‘God, I feel alone,’” she recalled, her voice breaking as she recounted that night. “You feel alone at that time, like you have no one.

“I told God, ‘I feel like I can’t anymore. I don’t know what I’m going to do.’”

Six hours later, she got a phone call.

“Ms. Hernandez, you were nominated for this program,” the message on her phone said, referring to United Way’s Spirit of Christmas.

“This was God,” Olga said. “This wasn’t a coincidence to me, because I had just been praying.”

To help, call the United Way of South Texas at (956) 686-6331 and inquire about this family and the Spirit of Christmas campaign. The Monitor has partnered with the United Way of South Texas to garner support for Rio Grande Valley families in need of monetary donations, or other items and gifts specified in this story.