Eight years after disappearing, my son Max’s biological mother, Macy, showed up on our doorstep, claiming she wanted him back. I shut the door, certain he’d stay with me. But the next morning, his bed was empty.
I met Max the night he was abandoned at the children’s shelter where I worked. He was two, soaked and shivering in a cardboard box, with a note: “His name is Max. I can’t do this anymore.” I couldn’t forget his solemn eyes. Six months later, I adopted him.
Though I gave him everything—love, stability, a home—Max never stopped wondering about his birth mother. On Mother’s Day, he refused to acknowledge me. At school and the doctor’s office, I was “Elizabeth,” never “Mom.”
On his 11th birthday, just after opening a gift from me, Macy appeared at our door. She’d turned her life around and wanted Max back. I told her to leave. But later that night, Max saw her outside and ran away to speak with her.
I tracked him to a motel. He said he just wanted answers. Macy claimed she’d changed and could offer him a better life. But Max made his choice: “You’re not my mom,” he told her. “Elizabeth is. She’s been there every day. I want to go home—with my mom.”
From that day on, Max changed. The wall between us began to fall. He introduced me as his mother, hugged me without hesitation, and said the words I’d waited years to hear: “You’re my real mom. Because you chose me.”
And I always will. Every single day.
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