Grief is never simple, but grief tangled with rejection feels like drowning while someone holds your head under water. When my mother passed away last spring, I expected heartbreak. I expected the sleepless nights, the memories crashing over me like waves, the ache of knowing I’d never hear her voice again.
What I didn’t expect was to be told that I wasn’t family enough to mourn her in public, that my love didn’t count because I was adopted. It still stings to write those words, though I’ve replayed that moment in my head a thousand times. My brother, Mark, stood in front of me two days before the funeral and said, “No one wants to hear from the adopted one.
Just sit with the family quietly and let me handle the speeches.”
The irony is that Mom would have been horrified to hear him say that. She had spent her whole life making sure I never felt like less than her child. To her, I was simply her daughter.
But in the middle of grief, Mark’s words landed like a blow that made me question everything: Did he really believe I didn’t belong? Did others feel the same way? To explain how we got there, I have to go back.
I was four when Mom adopted me. My biological parents had been young and unable to care for me, so I spent a couple of years bouncing between foster homes before she came into my life. She was already in her forties, a single mother with one biological child, Mark, who was eight at the time.
People always assumed adoption was a second choice, but for Mom, it wasn’t. She told me later that she had always wanted two children, but life didn’t work out that way. When she felt ready again, she decided adoption was the right path.
She said the moment she saw me sitting cross-legged in that crowded foster home, clutching a worn-out teddy bear, something inside her just knew: This is my daughter. Growing up, I never doubted her love. She was at every school play, every soccer game, every parent-teacher conference.
When I asked her if she loved me as much as she loved Mark, she didn’t flinch. “Love isn’t a pie you slice into smaller pieces,” she said once, cupping my cheek. “It’s more like a flame.
The more you share it, the brighter it burns.”
But Mark never saw it that way. As a child, he tolerated me. He called me “half-sis” to his friends, though technically I wasn’t half anything.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
