usa-goat.com
  • Stories
  • Funny jokes
  • Healthy
  • Blog
  • More
    • Blog
    • Contact
    • Search Page
Notification
usa-goat.comusa-goat.com
Font ResizerAa
  • HomeHome
  • My Feed
  • My Interests
  • My Saves
  • History
Search
  • Quick Access
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Blog Index
    • History
    • My Saves
    • My Interests
    • My Feed
  • Categories
    • Funny jokes
    • Blog
    • Stories
    • Healthy

Top Stories

Explore the latest updated news!

After Two Years Without My Twins I Was Called to Save One of Them but the Results Stunned the Doctor

3k 81

“I Cleared My Husband’s $300,000 Debt — But What He Said Next Shattered Everything I Thought I Knew About Him.”

9k 74

Every Day She Brought Sand Across The Border—Until Guards Learned Why

6.4k 88

Stay Connected

Find us on socials
248.1kFollowersLike
61.1kFollowersFollow
165kSubscribersSubscribe
Made by viralstoryteller.com
Stories

My Mother Chose Her Boyfriend Over Me — Years Later, She Came Looking for Me

5.4k 97
Share
SHARE

I was five years old when my mother left me at Aunt Carol’s house for what she called “a short vacation.” I still remember that day as clearly as if it had happened yesterday—the way she kissed me on the forehead, the smell of her perfume, and the promise that she would come back soon. “Just a week or two, sweetheart,” she had said, brushing my hair back from my face. “Be a good girl for Aunt Carol and Uncle Jim, okay?” I nodded because I always tried to be good.

I didn’t know that those two weeks would turn into nearly two decades. Aunt Carol and Uncle Jim were kind people, but they weren’t my parents. Their house always smelled of baked bread and old books, and though they never made me feel unwelcome, there was always this quiet, unspoken understanding that I was not truly theirs.

Aunt Carol would tuck me in at night and whisper, “Your mama loves you, Rose. She’s just busy right now.” I clung to that sentence like a lifeline. Every day, I would stare out of the window, watching cars pass, waiting for one of them to stop and for my mother to step out, smiling, arms open wide.

But she never came. As weeks turned into months, I began asking fewer questions. Aunt Carol stopped answering them, anyway.

“She’s traveling through Europe,” she’d say, “seeing the world. Isn’t that exciting?” It didn’t sound exciting to me. It sounded lonely.

When I turned seven, a postcard arrived. The front showed the Eiffel Tower, glittering in the night sky. The back read: Hi, my little Rosebud!

Mommy’s in Paris! I’ll be home soon. Be good and listen to Aunt Carol.

Love, Mom. I slept with that postcard under my pillow for years. But “soon” stretched endlessly.

Every few months, a new postcard came—from Rome, from Barcelona, from Vienna. The handwriting was always rushed, the messages short. There were pictures of her smiling beside men whose arms wrapped around her shoulders.

Aunt Carol always hid those postcards before I could look too closely, but once I caught a glimpse of a man kissing her cheek. She looked happy, carefree, as if she had forgotten all about me. By the time I was ten, I stopped sleeping with the postcard.

By twelve, I stopped expecting letters. And by fifteen, I stopped hoping. It was around then that I began to understand what had really happened.

I overheard Aunt Carol and Uncle Jim one night, their voices low but sharp enough to cut through the thin walls. “I can’t believe she just abandoned that child,” Uncle Jim muttered. “She didn’t think of it that way,” Aunt Carol said softly.

“You know how Linda is. She never wanted to be tied down.”

“Then she shouldn’t have had a kid. Poor Rose… she deserves better than this.”

The next morning, I confronted Aunt Carol.

“Did Mom leave me because she didn’t want me?”

Her lips pressed together. “No, sweetheart, she just… made bad choices. She loved you in her own way.”

But that answer didn’t sit right with me.

Love, I thought, wasn’t supposed to look like leaving. I grew up trying to fill the space she left behind. I studied hard, joined the school choir, volunteered at the library—anything to make myself feel whole again.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇

12READ MORE
Stories

After Two Years Without My Twins I Was Called to Save One of Them but the Results Stunned the Doctor

3k 81
Stories

“I Cleared My Husband’s $300,000 Debt — But What He Said Next Shattered Everything I Thought I Knew About Him.”

9k 74
Stories

Every Day She Brought Sand Across The Border—Until Guards Learned Why

6.4k 88
Stories

My Family Excluded Me From the Japan Trip I Paid For — So I Canceled Every Reservation, Changed the Locks, and Let Karma Do the Rest.

1.6k 67

usa-goat.com is the blog where emotions meet laughter! Discover touching stories that stay with you and jokes that will have you laughing to tears. Every post is handpicked to entertain, move, and brighten your day.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conidition
  • Adverts
  • Our Jobs
  • Term of Use

Made by usa-goat.com

adbanner
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?