My mom left when I was 12 to be with another man. After that, it was just me and my dad. He raised me alone, and when he passed, the house became mine. Now I’m 28. Last week, out of nowhere, my mom called. She said she was terminally ill and wanted to “make things right.”
She asked if she could move in, adding, “It would mean a lot to stay in the home I raised you in.” I told her, “You didn’t raise me. You left.” She cried and called me cruel. Reminded me I’m her only child. I didn’t dwell on it—until yesterday morning. I woke up to loud knocking. It was the police.
A neighbor had called after spotting an unresponsive woman on my front steps. It was her. My mother. She had been sitting out there for hours, her bags still next to her. The police said she likely collapsed from exhaustion—or maybe from not taking her medication. She’s in the hospital now.
They asked if I was her emergency contact. I said no. And sure, I felt a flicker of guilt. But the truth is, I’ve spent more years mourning the loss of a mother who was still alive than most people spend after their mother dies. I won’t open my door to someone who closed it on me first. Does that make me heartless?