I raised my son, Harrison, alone for ten years. His mom, Anna, left when he was one. Said she needed to “find herself” and flew off to Europe. I never stopped loving my son. I was there for every soccer game, every spelling bee, every late-night science project.
Anna’s parents, Diane and Thomas, stayed in Harrison’s life. I thought they were a blessing. Until the day I came home and heard Harrison crying.
“You made Mom leave!” he yelled. “Grandma said you kicked her out!”
My heart shattered. I texted Anna for the first time in years. She flew back within days, full of apologies and vague promises.
Harrison wanted to meet her, so I let him. They met at the park. He ran to her, hugged her, smiled at her gift—a drone. But something shifted. He kept looking at me.
Later, he sat beside me quietly. “She smells like hotel shampoo,” he said.
Anna left again two weeks later.
That night, Harrison told me the truth. “She didn’t ask about my life. But you always do.”
Then came the hardest part. “Grandma lied,” he whispered. “She wanted me to be mad at you, so I’d forgive Mom faster.”
I wanted to rage. Instead, I just hugged him.
He decided not to visit his grandparents anymore. I respected that.
That night, I finally slept. Not anxiously. But peacefully. Because my son knew the truth.
And karma? She’d already done the talking.