PART 2- -My Mom Erased Me From Her New Family. The Day I Turned 18, I Erased Myself From Hers.

And when I tried to speak up, to say I missed our old life, Mom told me to be grateful. To stop being selfish.
By the time I turned eighteen, I’d already begun planning my escape. The inheritance Dad left me was my ticket out. Mom had been managing the trust, and when I turned eighteen, the money would be mine. I’d saved up and researched apartments, set up everything for my exit. I wasn’t going to depend on her. I wasn’t going to let her make decisions for me anymore. I had a scholarship, a plan, and the funds to make it happen. I wasn’t going to be part of her new family anymore.

The day before my birthday, they held a family meeting. Richard and Mom announced that they were officially adopting Sophia and Brandon, making it a “one big happy family.” When I asked, “What about me?” Richard said, “You’re already Patricia’s son. That’s different.” That was the moment I knew for sure: I had been erased. I didn’t even have a say in the decision. They had decided for me, as if I were an afterthought.

My eighteenth birthday came, and I moved out. I didn’t want to be there anymore. I didn’t want to pretend that I mattered to her. I sent one text: “Moved out. I’m good. Don’t worry about me.” And I turned my phone off. When I woke up the next day, there were forty-seven missed calls and a hundred texts from Mom and Richard, filled with confusion, anger, guilt, and threats. I sent one final reply: “I’m an adult now. I have my own place. I’ll talk to you when I’m ready.” Then, I blocked their numbers.

Two weeks later, my uncle Greg called. He’d always been the only adult who saw what was happening. He told me Mom had been asking about me, frantic and worried. He said, “I’m proud of you. Most kids would’ve stuck around hoping things got better. You didn’t.” That helped me realize something I hadn’t fully understood—I didn’t hate her. I was just done waiting for her to care. I had to take control of my own life.

Months later, after the adoption went through, I learned through Uncle Greg that Mom had planned to use my inheritance for house renovations, treating it like “family money.” She was upset when I took it. She even converted my old room and donated my things, including childhood photos and items that reminded her of Dad. It was final. The question of whether I’d made the right choice was no longer a question. I had to move on. And when she showed up at my apartment door after my high school graduation, looking nothing like the woman she used to be, I realized she didn’t even know me anymore. “You graduated without telling me,” she said. “You didn’t seem interested in my life anymore,” I replied. That was the last conversation we had for a long time.

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