The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ludacris buys struggling widow’s groceries; story goes viral

- By Jennifer Brett jbrett@ajc.com

For years, one storm after another crashed into Therra Jaramillo’s life. Last month, an angry new squall rolled in.

Brain cancer stole her husband, dancer John Jaramillo, in 2014, leaving punishing debt along with the bruise on her heart. Sorting things out since then has been a heavy lift, sometimes heavier than Therra can bear. But she doesn’t have the luxury of recovering at a leisurely pace. She supports her brother, a disabled veteran who lives with her. Their mom died years ago after being injured during Hurricane Katrina.

Therra also takes care of rescue animals, on her income as a freelance writer. Last month, one of her client publicatio­ns — whose deadline she, of course, faithfully met — didn’t pay, knocking her already wobbly budget off kilter.

A friend gave her a lifeline in the form of a gift card to Whole Foods, which she usually can’t afford. Her shopping trip turned positively miraculous.

She lives in Lithonia and trekked to the Briarcliff Road location to stock up on meals for herself, her brother and her pets — two dogs, two cats and a blind chicken named Dixie Licklighte­r. Unloading her items, though, Therra realized the gift card wouldn’t cover them all. (There’s a reason they call it Whole Paycheck.) She started putting some things back, and a few of her items mingled with the customer’s in front of her.

“I might as well get it,” he said. She protested, but he insisted on covering her entire haul, all $375 worth.

“I burst into tears,” she said. They shook hands, then hugged. Her benefactor was on his way, telling her he was “just a guy” when she asked his name.

“You know that was Ludacris, right?” the cashier then asked.

“I started crying even harder,” Therra said, chagrined she hadn’t recognized him immediatel­y. “I

love him. My brain was spinning, though. It could have been Elvis.”

The actor, restaurate­ur and recording artist officially known as Chris Bridges is a communitym­inded guy who’s one to get personally involved.

When his Ludacris Foundation pitched in during a campaign called Hunger Action Month, for example, he didn’t merely stroke a check to the Atlanta Community Food Bank and Feeding America. He rolled up his sleeves and taught kids at the Carrie Steele-Pitts Home how to prepare healthy snacks, then they all played games. In November, he and then-Mayor Kasim Reed teamed up to hand out turkeys at the Rosel Fann Recreation Center in south Atlanta.

“We need to be the change we so often talk about,” Ludacris said at the time. “We need to reflect more, share more, and love more.”

After Therra shared her story, various outlets picked it up, and kind messages from all over the world started pouring in.

“It’s been a little embarrassi­ng,” she said. But it’s been mostly heartwarmi­ng, and she’s come to realize that Ludacris didn’t just pick up her tab. He didn’t just help feed a struggling writer, a disabled veteran and some formerly homeless pets. He made the internet a happy place for a change.

“People are starved for good news,” Therra said. “They’re starved for good people. This isn’t just about me. It’s about us. All of us.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Therra Jaramillo and one of her rescue pets.
CONTRIBUTE­D Therra Jaramillo and one of her rescue pets.
 ?? ALBERTO E. RODRIGUEZ/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ludacris picked up the grocery tab for Therra Jaramillo at Whole Foods.
ALBERTO E. RODRIGUEZ/GETTY IMAGES Ludacris picked up the grocery tab for Therra Jaramillo at Whole Foods.

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