I drove three hours in my best thrift-store dress to watch my son get married, carrying nothing but hope and a small velvet box wrapped carefully in my bag, only to realize as I arrived that something was terribly wrong. The venue I had been sent to was not a wedding hall at all but an abandoned, decaying building at the edge of town, its paint peeling and its gate locked as if it had been forgotten by time itself.
There were no cars parked outside, no music drifting through the air, no signs of celebration—only silence and the uncomfortable feeling that I had been led there deliberately. I sat in my old car gripping the steering wheel, rereading the address my son had sent me earlier that morning, trying to convince myself it was a mistake, but deep down I already knew it wasn’t. That quiet realization settled in slowly, heavier than anger or confusion, because it forced me to confront something I had been avoiding for years: the possibility that my own child was ashamed of me.