At seventeen, I uttered four words that shattered my life: “Dad, I’m pregnant.” He didn’t yell or cry.
He simply opened the door and said, “Then go. Do it on your own.” Homeless with a duffel bag, I raised my son alone.
The baby’s father vanished within weeks. We lived in a roach-infested studio, I juggled two jobs,
and I delivered my son with no one waiting outside. I named him Liam, and from that moment, he became my reason to fight.
By fifteen, Liam worked in a garage. By seventeen, customers asked for him by name. On his eighteenth birthday,
when I asked what he wanted, his answer stunned me: “I want to meet Grandpa.” We drove to my father’s house.
The door opened, and my dad froze at the sight of Liam—his mirror image. Liam handed him a box with a single slice of cake.
“I forgive you,” he said. “But next time I knock, it won’t be with cake. It’ll be as your biggest competitor.
I’m opening my own garage.” Back in the car, Liam turned to me. “I forgave him, Mom.
Maybe it’s your turn.” And I realized—we weren’t broken. We were unbreakable.