was just 18 when I found out I was pregnant. Scared and unsure, I turned to the people I thought would support me—my parents. But instead of love, they gave me ultimatums. They kicked me out the moment I told them. Then, a week later, they called saying they had a change of heart. They didn’t want to lose me—or the baby. I was skeptical, but desperate for any kind of support, so I agreed to come home.
When the day came to give birth, my mom handed me a stack of papers, saying they were standard hospital forms. I didn’t question her. I was in pain, exhausted, and still holding onto a shred of trust. I signed.
What I didn’t know—what shattered me beyond words—was that those papers were adoption papers. My baby was taken from me before I could even hold them properly. Gone. Just like that.
I left the hospital numb. I couldn’t even cry. I went straight to my boyfriend’s house, collapsed in his arms, and together with his family, we mourned a child we would never raise.
Time passed. We married when I was 22 and soon welcomed another baby. But the trauma of that first experience haunted us, especially my husband. He begged to be in the delivery room. I needed his support, and I wanted his mom there too. We even had family standing guard outside the room, unwilling to risk another heartbreak.
Over time, we built a family—four beautiful children. We love them fiercely, but there was always a space in our hearts that ached for the child who was taken from us.
Then, 24 years later, a letter arrived.
It was from my dad.
He wrote, “We have important news to share with you…”