People warned me.
My boss sat me down and asked if I truly understood what I was about to give up. My parents tried to convince me otherwise. Even my friends urged me to slow down, to reconsider, to think it through—because, in their eyes, I was throwing my future away.
Maybe I was.

Within a month, I left my job. I walked away from my career.
From that point on, my days became something entirely different. Therapy sessions. Doctor appointments. Learning how to lift the boys safely. Long nights when one of them couldn’t sleep, and I stayed awake beside him. Endless worry, constant effort, and a quiet, persistent determination to fight for them.
It wasn’t easy.
But it never once felt like a mistake.
They grew up into kind, thoughtful, gentle, patient young men—strong in ways most people will never fully understand.
Sam and Leo became my sons.
When they were teenagers, I met Mark. We started dating, and by the time the boys turned 15, Mark had stepped into something that was far from simple. He didn’t try to replace anything. He just showed up—consistently, quietly, and with care.
That’s when Mark and I got married. By then, I had seen how steady and reliable he truly was.
He became the boys’ stepfather, and over time, something real formed between them.
Now, Leo and Sam are 22.
And I love them more than anything.
At least, I thought I understood everything about them.