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My dad raised me alone after my birth mother abandoned me. On my graduation day, she suddenly appeared in the crowd, pointed at him, and said, “There’s something you need to know about the man you call ‘father.’” The truth left me questioning everything I thought I knew about the man who raised me.
Dad stared at it for a second and said, “Well… I survived that day. I can survive this.”
In the picture, a skinny teenage boy stands on a football field wearing a crooked graduation cap. He looks terrified. In his arms, he holds a baby wrapped in a blanket. Me.
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I used to joke that Dad looked like I might shatter if he breathed wrong.
“Seriously,” I told him once, pointing at the photo. “You look like you would’ve dropped me out of pure panic if I sneezed.”
Dad did more than okay.
He looked like I might shatter if he breathed wrong.
He came home exhausted after a late shift delivering pizzas and spotted his old bike leaning against the fence outside the house.
Then he saw the blanket bundled into the basket on the front.
Then the blanket moved.
My dad was 17 the night I showed up.
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That was it.
He was just a kid with a part-time job and a bike with a rusty chain.
Then I started crying.
She’s yours. I can’t do this.
He picked me up and never put me down again.
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The next morning was his graduation. Most people would’ve missed it. Most people would’ve panicked, called the police, maybe turned the baby over to social services, and said, “This isn’t my problem.”
My dad wrapped me tighter in the blanket, grabbed his cap and gown, and walked into that graduation carrying both of us.
That was when the picture got taken.
Most people would’ve missed it.
Dad skipped college to raise me.
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He worked construction in the morning and delivered pizzas at night. He slept in pieces.
Dad learned how to braid my hair from bad YouTube tutorials when I started kindergarten because I came home crying after another girl asked why my ponytail looked like a broken broom.
He burned approximately 900 grilled cheese sandwiches during my childhood.
And somehow, despite all of it, he made sure I never felt like the kid whose mom disappeared.
Dad skipped college to raise me.
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