My Dad Raised Me Alone After My Birth Mother Left Me in His Bike Basket at 3 Months Old – 18 Years Later She Showed up at My Graduation
Then the blanket moved.
My dad was 17 the night I showed up.
Under it was a baby girl, about three months old, red-faced and furious at the world. There was a note tucked into the folds.
She’s yours. I can’t do this.
That was it.
He said he didn’t know who to call first. His mom was dead, and his father had left years earlier. He was living with his uncle, and they barely spoke unless it was about grades or chores.
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.
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.
He skipped college to raise me.
He worked construction in the morning and delivered pizzas at night.
He slept in pieces.
He 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.
He worked construction in the morning and delivered pizzas at night.
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