Strawberry Phil's Forever

Strawberry Phil's Forever Vinyl Records, Cassette Tapes, CD's and Vintage Stereo
Equipment Store open by chance or appointment by calling 256-303-6625

03/06/2026

I am selling at the ARCA Record Show at the Gardendale Civic Center today until 7:00 PM and tomorrow from 9:00 AM until 5:00 PM. I invite you to visit me.

09/24/2025

They say hunger hurts, but shame cuts deeper. I’ve seen kids skip meals, not because they weren’t hungry—because they were broke.

I’m Frank. Sixty-eight. Retired janitor, steelworker before that. My knees ache, my back stiffens like cold iron, but I still walk to Jefferson Middle School every morning. Not because I work there anymore. Because of the lunch line.

For twenty-five years I mopped those halls, heard the bell clang, smelled the sour milk cartons, saw kids shove books into lockers. I also saw something that’s hard to forget: a child holding a lunch tray, red-faced, being told, “Sorry, you don’t have enough in your account.”

I was one of those kids once. My mother worked double shifts at the diner, my father gone. I remember standing in that line, tray trembling, the other kids staring, while the cashier pulled my plate back. I learned early that shame is heavier than hunger.

So last winter, I started doing something small. Each week I’d take fifty dollars from my pension, walk to the cafeteria window, and ask quietly, “Whose account is short today?” Then I’d pay it. No speeches. No names. Just settled the debt and left.

At first, they thought I was confused. Then they realized I meant it. And I kept coming back. Week after week. Month after month.

One morning, the cashier slid me a folded napkin with the receipt. On it, a child’s handwriting: “Whoever you are, thank you. I could eat today.”

That napkin nearly broke me. I kept it in my wallet, right next to the photo of my mother.

The accounts piled up. I lost count around five hundred lunches. Sometimes I’d cover one, sometimes ten. Some kids smiled a little brighter at the cashier the next day. Some never knew. That was fine with me.

Then the whispers started. A teacher stopped me in the hall. “Frank, are you the one?” I told her I didn’t know what she meant. She just patted my arm and said, “You’ve given more lessons than any textbook.”

A month later, a parent knocked on my door. A single mom, eyes rimmed red. She said, “My son didn’t tell me you paid. He didn’t want me to feel worse. I just want you to know… you kept him from skipping meals.” She handed me a basket of apples from her yard. “It’s all we have to give back.”

News travels fast in a small town. Before long, the PTA started a fund. Called it “Lunch Angels.” They wanted me to speak at the launch. I refused. Told them, “This isn’t about me. It’s about kids eating with dignity.”

But the truth is, it had become about something bigger than food.

One Friday, I sat in the cafeteria corner, sipping coffee. A tall young man in a delivery uniform came in, dropped a box, then paused by my table. He lifted his cap, and I saw those same wide eyes I once watched in the lunch line.

“Mr. Frank?” he asked.

I nodded.

He smiled. “You don’t remember me. But you paid for me. More than once. I thought about it every day. And today, when I saw a little girl at the gas station short two bucks, I covered her. Because of you.”

My throat tightened. He leaned closer. “You didn’t just feed me lunch. You fed me hope.”

When he walked out, I sat there staring at the half-empty coffee cup, trying not to let the tears fall in public.

People sometimes ask me, “Why bother? You can’t solve poverty.”

And they’re right. I can’t.

But here’s what I know: kindness doesn’t erase poverty, but it erases shame. And sometimes that’s enough to change a day, a child, maybe even a life.

So tomorrow morning, I’ll be back at that window. Quiet as ever. Because no kid should carry hunger—and shame—on the same tray.
For more fiction stories Things That Make You Think

09/22/2025

No store at this time.

09/07/2025

The call came during second period—calm, but with an edge. “Can you come down to Room 12? One of the eighth graders is refusing to remove his cap.”

When I got to my office, there he was. Jaden. Usually soft-spoken, respectful. But today… he sat curled in the chair like he wanted to vanish. Cap pulled low. He muttered so quietly I almost missed it: “They laughed at me.”

He told me kids in the cafeteria had made fun of his botched haircut. He slowly lifted his cap. His hair was butchered—lines jagged, patches bald. I could’ve written him up. But rules aren’t always what kids need.

I stood and walked over to my cabinet and pulled out my old barber kit. Before I became a principal, I cut hair to pay for college. “Let me help, yeah?” I asked.

He nodded. I draped a towel over his shoulders and started shaping him up. As the first smooth line buzzed into place, he exhaled—like someone finally let him breathe again. And then he started talking. About how laughter hurts worse when it follows you all the way home.

As I adjusted the angle for a final fade, I noticed something. Scars. Tiny, raised lines etched into the back of his scalp. I froze for half a second. “These… from something recent?” I asked softly.

He didn’t answer right away. Then he whispered: “That’s where they hit me. Last year. When we were still at our old place.”

I turned the clippers off. “Who’s ‘they’?” I asked.

He didn’t look at me. And then he said something that made my blood run cold—

“My mom’s ex-boyfriend,” he whispered, his voice so small it was almost swallowed by the quiet hum of the office. “He… he used to get mad. At her. At me. He’d throw things. The last time, it was a coffee mug.”

The clippers in my hand suddenly felt impossibly heavy. The botched haircut, the hat, the fear—it wasn’t just about shame. It was about hiding. It was about survival.

“Jaden,” I said, my voice steady despite the rage coiling in my gut. “Is he still around? Is your mom okay?”

He finally looked at me in the mirror, his eyes wide and haunted. “We left. A few months ago. We have a new apartment now. It’s supposed to be better.” He paused. “But he found us.”

My blood ran cold. “When, Jaden?”

“Last night,” he choked out, a single tear tracing a path through the tiny clipped hairs on his cheek. “He was waiting outside. He told my mom he was sorry. He said he’d changed. She… she let him in.”

The haircut. It wasn’t his cousin. It was him. A clumsy, cruel attempt at an apology, or worse, a mark of ownership.

I put the clippers down. The haircut was over. My real job was just beginning.

“Okay,” I said, my voice leaving no room for argument. I put my hands on his shoulders, turning him to face me. “Here is what’s going to happen. You are not going home on that bus today. You are going to stay right here with me. We’re going to call your mom, and we’re going to call some people who can help. People who make sure men like that go away and never come back. Do you understand?”

He just nodded, a wave of relief so profound it seemed to uncurl his hunched shoulders.

For the next two hours, my office became a command center. I called Child Protective Services. I called the police. I spoke to Jaden’s mother, who sobbed on the phone, admitting she was terrified but didn’t know what to do.

When she arrived at the school, she wasn’t alone. A police officer and a social worker were with her. They had a plan. An emergency protective order. A new place to go, a shelter with security, where he couldn’t find them.

As Jaden got ready to leave with his mom, he stopped at my office door. His hair was perfect—a sharp, clean fade. But more than that, his eyes were clear. The fear was still there, but it wasn’t hiding anymore.

“Thank you,” he whispered.

“You’re a good kid, Jaden,” I said, my voice thick. “You deserve to feel safe.”

He reached up and touched the back of his head, where the scars were now hidden beneath the clean lines of his new haircut. “You know,” he said, a small, hesitant smile on his face. “You’re a pretty good barber.”

I just smiled back. “I’m a better principal.”

That day, I broke a school rule. But I had followed a much more important one. I had listened. I had seen a child who was hiding, and instead of punishing him for the hat, I had asked him why he needed it. Sometimes, the most important thing a kid needs isn't a lesson. It's a safe harbor. And a decent haircut.
Credit to the respective owner~
Read more about the beautiful story - https://vfastories.com/a-california-guy-gives-his-sick-neighbor-loving-care-and-support-in-her-last-days/

06/11/2025

Rest in peace, Brian Wilson!

01/31/2025
Strawberry Phil's Forever open 9-4 today and tomorrow.
01/31/2025

Strawberry Phil's Forever open 9-4 today and tomorrow.

09/28/2024

Strawberry Phil's Forever is closing for today. Until further notice, I will be open by chance or appointment only. Please check out my booths at Records and Retro show at the Orion Amphitheater Sunday, October 6. Also, please visit my booth at River City Pickers. Thanks for your business. For further information, please call me at 256-303-6625.

Thanks
Phil

09/27/2024
Open today and tomorrow 10:00-5:00
09/13/2024

Open today and tomorrow 10:00-5:00

Open today until 5:00 PM
07/06/2024

Open today until 5:00 PM

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Decatur, AL
35601

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+12563036625

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