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Ms. Millie; Community love in action

“Caribbean healing is about communities that refuse to let anyone carry their burdens alone.”

I got the call the same day I finished my final class of my degree. Ms. Millie was gone. My first thought was not grief; it was confusion. A world without Ms. Millie did not make sense.

Thirty years ago, I met Millicent Spencer through her eldest daughter, terrified of this strong Jamaican woman who commanded respect in Rockfort, Kingston. Ms. Millie broke through my fear the way Caribbean mothers do: with food, with questions about my wellbeing, with the kind of love that does not ask for permission before it takes root.

Here is what made it complicated: I was the adopted sister of the man who almost took her firstborn away from their family. They had every reason to hate me. Instead, Ms. Millie loved me harder, as if my association with trauma meant I needed extra care, not less.

That is Caribbean healing in action; loving people not despite their wounds, but because of them.

As I sat in that Portmore church just days after my final exam back in Toronto, watching hundreds of people gather to celebrate her life, I realized something profound about community care.  Every person in those pews had their own Ms. Millie story. The woman who ran financial services by being the banker of the neighbourhood pardna (partner) draw, while running her own restaurant and local grocery store as a single mother raising three children and then grandchildren had somehow found time to nurture entire communities throughout the island.

She was the neighbour who connected every Canadian-bound Jamaican with me, ensuring no one traveled alone to a foreign country. She was the mother who would not let me leave Jamaica without suitcases full of cultural blessings: mangoes, pudding, freshly made juices and just all types of love from home. She was the entrepreneur who showed her children that success meant building something while lifting others.

After the burial, I watched the community transform her court into an outdoor reception. Chairs appeared. Food materialized. Neighbours who had not spoken in months worked side by side, cooking and sharing stories. This is what Caribbean grief looks like: collective, nourishing, insistent on celebration even through tears.

Sitting there, I understood why our mental health conversations often miss the mark. We talk about therapy and self-care as if healing happens in isolation, but Caribbean healing is communal. It is making sure newcomers have someone to call when they are lonely. It is creating networks of care that stretch across oceans and generations.

Ms. Millie’s three children carry her legacy differently. Her eldest, Nadine I like to call her Ms. Millie’s top general, because much like her mother she keeps the order and the balance by always doing the right thing with strength and love. Andrew, her one son, the entrepreneurial dreamer inherited her business mind and hustler’s spirit. His mother taught him that success does not require punching someone else’s clock. Her youngest, Audrey, the rebel with a cause, became a mother who moves with intentional love, understanding that family comes first. Each child took what they needed from her abundant spirit.

This is intergenerational healing; watching parents model community care so thoroughly that it becomes second nature in their children.

Here is what struck me most, Ms. Millie was not unique. She was extraordinary, yes, but not rare. Our communities are full of women like her; the ones who remember your children’s birthdays, who cook extra because they know someone will stop by hungry, who create informal support networks that keep families afloat.

We do not celebrate these women enough while they are alive. We wait until funerals to acknowledge how their quiet acts of love held entire neighbourhoods together.

Caribbean healing happens through this kind of radical care; the decision to nurture beyond your immediate family, to create abundance from whatever resources you have, to build community even when systems try to divide us.

Ms. Millie proved that legacy is not measured in dollars and cents. It is measured in how many people feel seen, supported, and loved because you existed. It is the young woman who flies from Toronto to Kingston for your funeral because thirty years ago, you chose to love her when the world gave you reasons not to.

Tomorrow is not guaranteed, but the love we pour into our communities creates ripples that outlast our physical presence. Ms. Millie’s spirit lives in every act of neighbourly care, every mentorship connection, every time someone chooses nurturing over judgment.

That is the legacy I want to leave. That is the reminder her transition offers all of us; community love never really dies; it just finds new hands to continue the work.

Rest in power, Ms. Millie. Your love lives on.

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