Those dark edges and stubborn stains can be the quiet evidence of lives built on effort: the mechanic who keeps strangers safe on the road, the farmworker whose hands never really come clean, the parent juggling shifts until there’s barely time to sleep, let alone scrub every trace of labor from their skin. Their nails don’t reveal a lack of pride; they reveal what it costs to keep going.
Yet not everyone starts from the same place. Access to running water, safe work, gentle soaps, even a few spare minutes alone—these are privileges, not guarantees. To look at someone’s hands and decide who they are is to ignore everything you can’t see: the bills, the bodies they care for, the battles they don’t talk about. Nails can hint at a story, but they never tell the whole one—and they never justify forgetting someone’s dignity.
