When I was 5, my mom left me on my grandmother’s porch. Her new husband didn’t want kids, and I wasn’t part of their picture-perfect life. Grandma became my entire world — she raised me, comforted me, and loved me in all the ways my mother didn’t.
Still, I never stopped hoping. Every birthday, every school play, every night before bed, I wished she would come back. But she never did.
Now I’m 25. Grandma passed away last year, and her loss shattered me. Then, out of nowhere, my mom showed up. She was crying, apologizing, saying she regretted leaving me after her husband divorced her. I wanted to believe her — I always had — so I let her in.
At first, she was everything I dreamed of: warm, attentive, even affectionate. But something felt off. She was glued to her phone, constantly taking photos of us — laughing, hugging, eating dinner — but she never sent them to me or posted them anywhere.
One night, while she was in the shower, her phone buzzed on the table. I glanced at the screen — and froze. The message preview read:
“Can’t wait to meet your daughter tomorrow. The adoption agency will love these photos — they’re perfect.”
My heart dropped. She wasn’t trying to reconnect. She was using me — and the photos — to prove she was a “loving mother” so she could adopt another child.
That night, I packed her things and left them outside. I didn’t say a word. For years, I dreamed of having a mom again — but sometimes, the person you’ve been waiting for isn’t the person you truly need.