The morning my parents showed up at my door, the sun had barely risen, and the house was still wrapped in the quiet peace I had spent years building from nothing. I was standing in the kitchen with a cup of coffee, going through emails before work, while my teenage son slept upstairs, completely unaware of how quickly our calm morning was about to shatter. When the doorbell rang, I remember frowning—no one ever came that early.
But when I opened the door and saw them standing there with suitcases in hand, my breath caught. Seventeen years had passed since I last saw their faces, yet they stood there smiling like no time had gone by, like they hadn’t erased me from their lives without a second thought. The last time we stood face to face, I was eighteen, scared, and pregnant, begging them not to turn their backs on me.
Instead of support, I was given an ultimatum: leave, or lose them forever. And when I chose to keep my baby, they didn’t hesitate—they chose to lose me. No calls, no birthdays, no help.