My name is Jessica, and my husband Ethan and I adopted our daughter, Emma, a year ago. She’s our world, but my mother-in-law, Carol, never accepted her. At Emma’s fourth birthday, Carol gifted her a giant stuffed elephant, and I thought maybe she was finally trying to bond.
Emma adored the elephant, but something about it bothered me—its unusual heaviness and a faint chemical smell. One night, my curiosity got the best of me. I cut open the toy and found papers inside—Emma’s adoption documents covered in hateful, cruel messages like “Not real family” and “She’ll never be yours.” My heart broke.
Furious, I stormed outside and burned the elephant, unwilling to let that venomous reminder of Carol’s prejudice remain near my daughter. When Ethan came home, I told him everything. Horrified, he cut his mother out of our lives for good.
We haven’t spoken to her since. Emma is our daughter, and no one can take that away from us—not even blood.