My real dad left when I was six, and my stepdad, Mark, stepped in to raise me. But I never accepted him. No matter how hard he tried attending my school plays, teaching me to ride a bike, showing up at every parent-teacher conference I kept him at arm’s length. Deep down, I felt like loving him would betray my biological father, even though he was long gone.
At 18, I left home for college and never looked back. I didn’t call. I didn’t visit. For five years, silence grew between us like a wall. Then, one winter morning, my mom called. Her voice trembled as she told me Mark was very sick. By the time I made it home, he was gone. At the funeral, my mom handed me his old, worn-out jacket. “It’s the only thing he wanted you to have,” she said softly.
Angry and hurt, I tossed the jacket into the back of my closet, refusing to look at it. To me, it was just a symbol of the man I never appreciated. Years passed. One day, while cleaning out my closet, I decided to donate the jacket. Before folding it, I slipped my hand into the pocket and froze. Inside was a small, folded note and an old photograph of me as a child, missing my two front teeth and grinning wildly.
The note read: “Even if you never call me ‘Dad,’ raising you has been the greatest honor of my life. I’m proud of you, and I’ll love you forever. Mark.” Tears blurred my vision. I sank to the floor, clutching the jacket. In that moment, all my anger melted into regret. Mark hadn’t needed my approval to love me he had loved me unconditionally all along. From that day forward, I promised to live in a way that would make him proud. Sometimes, the people who love us the most aren’t the ones who share our blood, but the ones who choose to stay.