I decided to take my mom to prom knowing full well that people would stare, whisper, and maybe even laugh, but I never imagined that the night would end up rewriting how everyone in that gym saw her—and how I finally saw her too. My mom’s name is Emma, and she had me when she was seventeen, an age when most people are worrying about homework, crushes, and weekend plans, not diapers and rent. The moment she found out she was pregnant, her life split in two. The boy who helped create me disappeared without a second thought, leaving behind silence instead of responsibility.
No calls, no questions, no child support, no interest in the life growing inside her. She never spoke about him with bitterness, but his absence was always there, a quiet outline shaping everything that followed. My mom gave up college applications she’d already started, nights out with friends, spontaneous road trips, and most painfully for her, her own senior prom. She never dressed it up as a tragedy, but I grew up watching the cost of that sacrifice in small, everyday ways. She worked double shifts at a diner, came home smelling like grease and coffee, studied for her GED after midnight, and still woke up early to make sure I had lunch packed and homework checked.