I was eighteen when my life split in two. One decision, one mistake in my father’s eyes, and suddenly I was standing outside the only home I had ever known with nowhere to go. He didn’t yell for long—just enough to make it clear I wasn’t welcome anymore. I remember the door closing more than the words. After that, it was silence, fear, and a future I had to figure out alone while carrying a child no one else wanted to claim.
Raising my son wasn’t easy, but it gave me something stronger than regret. Every late night, every job I took, every sacrifice—I made it with one goal in mind: he would never feel unwanted the way I did. I never spoke badly about his grandfather, even though I carried that hurt quietly for years. I told myself that some doors, once closed, are better left that way.