At twelve years old, I didn’t see my adoptive mother as family—I saw her as an escape. Leaving the orphanage was all I cared about, and she was simply the way out. Even though she tried endlessly to make me feel loved—buying me clothes, cooking meals she thought I’d enjoy, and showing up for every important moment—I kept my distance. I convinced myself she wasn’t my “real” mom, and no matter how much she gave, I never gave anything back.
When she passed away a year ago, I stood at her funeral feeling empty rather than heartbroken. There was guilt, but no real grief—at least not yet. Then a stranger approached me and handed me a small porcelain figurine, saying it was something my adoptive mom wanted me to have. I barely thought about it before smashing it in frustration. But inside, hidden carefully, was a tiny rolled-up note in her handwriting, containing a series of numbers and one word: “PASSWORD.”
That clue led me to a bank account I never knew existed—one she had quietly built over the years for me. But there was a condition attached to the funds in her will: I could only access the money if I became a registered foster parent. Even after everything—my distance, my lack of gratitude—she had still been thinking about my future, still trying to guide me toward something meaningful.
Now, as I begin the process of becoming a foster parent, I feel something I never expected: fear mixed with understanding. Not fear of responsibility, but fear that a child might look at me the same way I once looked at her. And maybe that was her final lesson—to show me what unconditional love really is. For the first time, I’m starting to understand it… and maybe, finally, I’m ready to give it.