Finding diapers in my teenage son’s backpack left me speechless. When I followed him after school, what I discovered sent a shiver down my spine—and forced me
Finding diapers in my teenage son’s backpack left me speechless. When I followed him after school, what I discovered sent a shiver down my spine—and forced me to face a truth about myself I’d been avoiding for years.
My alarm went off at 5:30 a.m., just as it had every weekday for the past decade. I slid out of bed, showered, dressed, and began answering emails before the sun even rose. By the time the clock struck seven, I was already in the kitchen, scrolling through my schedule while making coffee.
“Morning, Mom,” my son, Caleb, mumbled as he shuffled in wearing his school sweatshirt. “Morning, honey,” I said, sliding a plate of toast toward him. “Don’t forget you’ve got that history test today.”
He nodded, barely glancing up, his eyes glued to his phone.
That was our routine. Quick greetings, small reminders, rushed breakfasts, and then he was gone. After that, I’d head into MBK Construction—the company my father had built from nothing and the one I’d promised to carry forward after his passing three years ago.
The truth? Running the company had cost me my marriage. “Laura, you’re married to that company, not to me,” my ex-husband, Grant, had told me the night he packed his bags.
Maybe he was right. But if he truly loved me, wouldn’t he have accepted that ambition was part of who I was? Instead, he left for someone who put him first.
Good for him, I had thought at the time. I had a legacy to protect, and besides, I still had Caleb. My brilliant, kind-hearted son.
At fifteen, he was already taller than me, with his father’s easy charm but my determination. Watching him grow into a young man made the sacrifices seem worth it. Or at least that’s what I told myself.
Lately, though, something had changed. He’d grown quiet, distant. At dinner one evening, I caught him staring at nothing, lost in thought.
“Earth to Caleb,” I teased, waving a hand in front of his face. “Where’d you go?”
He blinked, shaking his head. “Sorry.
Just thinking about stuff.”
“What kind of stuff? School? A girl?”
He gave a faint smile but avoided my eyes.
“It’s nothing, Mom. Just tired.”
I let it go. Teenagers needed space—or so the parenting books claimed.
But soon, I noticed other things. He was constantly on his phone, texting someone, but he’d always hide the screen when I walked by. He started insisting on walking to school instead of letting me drive him.
And his bedroom door, once casually open, was now always closed. At first, I chalked it up to teenage privacy. Until I got a call from his English teacher.
“Mrs. Parker? This is Ms.
Dalton. I wanted to touch base about Caleb.”
My stomach clenched. “Is everything alright?”
“I’m concerned.
His grades have dropped significantly this past month. He’s missed two quizzes, and yesterday he didn’t show up to class at all, though the attendance office marked him present.”
I froze, pen in hand over a contract. “What?”
“I just wanted to check if everything’s okay at home.
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