I was eighteen when I realized that love isn’t just about saying thank you. Sometimes it’s about publicly and openly defending the person who dedicated their whole life to defending you.
The idea came about simply. My prom was approaching, and while my friends were obsessing over dates and clothes, I couldn’t stop thinking about my mother, Emma. She had me when she was seventeen. Before I was born, she was just another high school girl dreaming of dresses, dances, and a future that seemed promising. Then she got pregnant, and all those dreams quietly vanished.
The man who got her pregnant disappeared the moment she told him. Not a goodbye. No support. No interest in the child he’d helped create. He just left. My mother didn’t just miss a date: she missed her prom, her senior year party, her college plans, and the feeling of being a carefree teenager. She traded it all for night shifts, secondhand baby clothes, and a newborn who cried more than he slept.
I grew up watching her do everything on her own. She worked the night shift at a roadside diner, cleaned houses on weekends, babysat, and studied for her high school equivalency exam after I finally fell asleep. When money was tight, she skipped meals. When she was exhausted, she kept going. When she talked about her “almost prom,” she laughed, but there was always a hint of sadness in her eyes that she couldn’t quite hide.
As my own prom approached, something clicked. Maybe it was sentimental. Maybe it was unwavering. But it felt right.
She gave up her prom for me. I was going to return the favor.
One night, while I was washing the dishes, I blurted it out without thinking. “You never went to prom because of me. I want to take you to mine.”
At first, she laughed, as if she were joking. Then she saw my face. Her laughter died away. She had to hold onto the counter to keep from falling, tears streaming down her cheeks. “Are you serious?” she kept asking. “Aren’t you ashamed?”
I told him the truth. Never in my life have I felt so proud of anyone.
My stepfather, Mike, was thrilled. He came into our lives when I was ten and treated me like a son from day one. He taught me how to tie a tie, how to understand people, how to be a decent man. He immediately started talking about photos and bouquets of flowers as if it were the best idea he’d ever heard.
My stepsister, Brianna, did not share her enthusiasm.
Brianna is seventeen and lives as if the world exists to admire her. Perfect hair, expensive clothes, constant social media posts, and an ego that overflows. From the beginning, she treated my mother like she was an invisible piece of furniture. She was polite when adults were around, but cruel when they weren’t.
When she found out about the dance, she almost choked on her coffee.
“Are you taking your mother to the dance?” he mocked. “How pathetic.”
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