My husband and I adopted our son six years ago through a closed adoption, and we never knew anything about his earliest days. One afternoon at the park, a woman approached him, smiled through tears, and said, “I missed you so much.” Alarmed, I quickly pulled him away and called the police.
When officers checked her identity, one of them took me aside and revealed a shocking truth. The woman, Elena, wasn’t a stranger with bad intentions—she was the paramedic who had saved my son’s life as a newborn. Six years earlier, he had been abandoned in a gas station bathroom during a freezing January night. Barely breathing and suffering from severe hypothermia, he survived only because Elena performed CPR on him for eleven minutes in the ambulance.
The officer also explained that Elena had lost her own baby just two months before that emergency call. Saving my son became a deeply emotional moment for her, a chance to save a life when she had been unable to save her own child. She quietly followed the case afterward, making sure he was safe, and felt relieved when she learned he had been adopted into a loving family.
Elena said she never contacted us because she didn’t want to interfere with our lives; she only wanted to know that the little boy she fought so hard to save was happy. She recognized him at the park by a small scar on his forehead from that night. Moved by her kindness and sacrifice, I invited her to his upcoming birthday party. Sometimes, the people who save your entire world carry that love silently for years, asking for nothing in return.