Since I’m Clearly Not Your Dad, I’ve Decided To Change Everything

7

My stepdaughters are now 16 and 18. Despite years of effort, they’re indifferent. Yesterday, my stepdaughter coldly stated, “You’re delusional if you think you’re our dad.” Her words crushed me.

Quietly furious, I declared, “Since I’m clearly not your dad, I’ve decided…

…to step back.”

That’s what I said.

Calmly, but with finality.

It wasn’t a threat, and I didn’t raise my voice.

Just a tired truth hanging in the air like fog. I didn’t sleep that night.

I kept staring at the ceiling, thinking about every lunch I packed, every practice I drove them to, every dumb dad joke I told to try to get a smile.

And the way they’d barely mumble a thank-you, if that. I wasn’t looking to replace their father.

I just wanted to show up for them, consistently, the way he never did.

I met their mom, Tamsin, nine years ago.

Widowed young. We took it slow.

I knew it was a package deal, and I embraced that from day one. I went to PTA meetings, learned how to French braid hair, even sat through endless dance recitals and soccer games.

I showed up when their dad forgot birthdays.

I helped with math homework, baked birthday cakes, and cried at graduation.

But no matter what I did, I was always “Wes.” Never “Dad.” Not even by accident. The 18-year-old, Miri, was polite but distant.

She’d make conversation when she needed a ride or money, but always with this underlying chill.

The 16-year-old, Anika, was more blunt. Her words cut deep sometimes, but I always told myself: “Teenagers.

Give it time.”

But when Anika looked me dead in the eyes that day and said, “You’re delusional if you think you’re our dad,” something broke inside me.

I quietly walked out of the kitchen, sat in my car for a long time, and texted Tamsin:
“Need to talk tonight.

Alone.”

That night, we sat in our bedroom, door closed.

I told her what happened. Her face fell, and for once, she didn’t defend them. “I’m so sorry,” she whispered.

“I think they’re just…confused.

Angry.

They’ve been through a lot.”

“I know,” I said.

“But I’ve been through a lot too. Loving them hasn’t been easy, but I’ve done it anyway.

And I don’t think I can keep pouring myself into a role they refuse to acknowledge.”

She nodded, tearfully.

I think she knew this moment was coming. “So, what do you want to do?” she asked.

The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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