My dad raised me alone after my birth mother left me in his bike basket when I was three months old. He was just seventeen, terrified, and holding a baby on his graduation day. He skipped college, worked two jobs, and learned to braid my hair from bad YouTube videos. He never made me feel unwanted, even though he was just a kid himself.
On my own graduation day, a woman stood up from the crowd and pointed at him, saying he wasn’t my real father. She claimed he had stolen me. Dad admitted he wasn’t my biological parent, but explained that she had left me with him for one night and never returned. An older teacher confirmed the story: Liza had disappeared years ago with her boyfriend.
Then Liza revealed the real reason she had come. She was dying of leukemia and needed a bone marrow match. She begged me to save her life. The crowd went silent. Dad simply placed a hand on my shoulder and said he would support whatever I chose, because that’s who he had always been.
I agreed to get tested, not because she was my mother, but because Dad had raised me to do the right thing even when it’s hard. As we walked across the field together, I realized a parent isn’t the one who gives birth. A parent is the one who stays when staying costs everything.