When I was just three years old, my mom left. She walked away from our family, leaving my dad to raise me alone. Growing up, he never spoke much about her. Anytime I asked, he would just shake his head and say, “She wasn’t fit to be your mom.”
As a child, I didn’t understand what that meant. I thought maybe she had gotten sick, or maybe she just didn’t love me. But the truth remained hidden, tucked away in the silence of my father’s eyes.
Fifteen years later, when I was 18, I was working my regular shift at a local shop. Out of nowhere, a woman walked in and asked for me by name. I looked up, and my world stopped.
I froze. This woman—my mother—was standing right in front of me.
She didn’t look like the person I had imagined all those years. Life had clearly been hard on her. She carried an air of exhaustion, with lines of regret etched across her face. Her hands trembled as she tried to smile, whispering, “I’m your mom.”
In that moment, my father’s words finally made sense. She wasn’t fit to raise me back then, but here she was, trying to reclaim some part of what she had lost.
The encounter left me shaken. I didn’t know whether to hug her or push her away. All I knew was that the gap of fifteen years couldn’t be erased in a single conversation.
Still, the truth had been revealed. The mother I longed for was real — but she was also a stranger.