My mother left the day I was born, and the only thing she gave my father was a sentence that stayed with him for the rest of his life. She told him she wasn’t interested in being a parent, placed me in his arms, and walked out without looking back, leaving behind no address, no apology, and no intention of ever returning. For twenty-two years, she remained nothing more than a memory I never actually had, while my father became everything I needed without ever asking for recognition.
He raised me alone, working long hours, coming home exhausted, yet still finding the strength to cook, clean, help with homework, and sit beside me through every small or difficult moment that shaped my childhood. What always struck me the most wasn’t just what he did, but what he refused to do, because he never spoke badly about her, never poisoned my mind with resentment, and never let his pain become my burden. When I once asked him why she left, he didn’t give me anger, only a quiet answer about people making choices they aren’t ready to face, and when I asked if he hated her, he told me he loved me more than he could ever hate anything she had done.
That answer became the foundation of who I was.
Leave a Comment