I am Matteo. As a child, I believed my family was simple—fragile, perhaps, but filled with love and warmth. My parents, Clara and Lorenzo, seemed inseparable through my young eyes. Dad ran a small workshop in a quiet Tuscan village called Borgo San Vito, while Mom stayed home to care for me. I was their only child, and in my innocence, I thought our little world would last forever.
But one day, everything shattered like glass. Dad lost his job without warning. I didn’t fully grasp what that meant, but I noticed the change in him—his laughter faded, and silence settled over our home like a heavy fog. Though he found work again, money slipped through our fingers like autumn leaves blown by the wind. At night, I’d hear them fighting—Mom’s voice sharp, plates crashing, Dad’s silence growing louder. I would hide under the blankets, trembling, waiting for the storm to pass.

And then came the final blow: Dad discovered Mom was secretly seeing someone else. Our home turned into a war zone—screams, tears, and slammed doors. When Dad left, the silence he left behind was unbearable. I missed him so much it hurt to breathe. I begged Mom to take me to him, but she snapped, “He left us, Matteo! That man is filth!” Her words cut deep, but they couldn’t erase my longing for my father.
One cold morning, she came to me smiling—a rare sight back then. “Pack your things, love. We’re going to the sea,” she said. My heart soared. The sea! It felt like a dream. As she packed an old suitcase, I asked to bring my toy trains. She stopped me: “We’ll buy new ones there, better ones.” I believed her—I trusted her. She was my mother.
We went to the bus station, crowded and noisy. After getting the tickets, she said we had time for a short detour. We boarded an old, rattling bus that jolted with every bump. I stared out the window, dreaming of waves and sandcastles. Eventually, we arrived at a worn-down building. “Wait for me on that bench,” she said. “I’m going to get ice cream. Don’t move.” I nodded and sat, watching her walk away.

Minutes dragged into hours. The sun set, the wind turned icy, and my hope slowly dissolved. I searched every window for her, waiting for her to return with ice cream. But she never came. Darkness fell. I cried out her name, but only silence answered. Eventually, I curled up on the bench, tears staining my cheeks, and fell asleep.
When I woke, I wasn’t outside anymore. I was in a warm bed in a strange, empty room. “Mom?” I called out. But the door opened and… it was Dad. Beside him stood a woman I didn’t know. I leapt from the bed, confused and panicked. “Where’s Mom? She went to get ice cream and never came back!”
Dad sat beside me, his face weighed down with sadness. He took my hand and said words that still echo in my heart: “Matteo, your mother abandoned you. She’s gone, and she’s not coming back.” I couldn’t believe it. Mothers don’t just leave. I sobbed, insisting he was wrong—she had promised me the sea. But he held me tight and repeated the truth: she was gone.
The years went on. Dad and I moved to Positano, a beautiful village by the sea. The woman with him was Giulia. She was gentle and patient. At first, I kept my distance. But slowly, she became someone I trusted—someone I started to call “Mom.” She wasn’t the one who left; she was the one who stayed. When my little sister Sofia was born, I finally understood what a real family could feel like—safe, warm, and whole.
As I got older, Dad told me more. Mom had called him the next morning after abandoning me. Her voice was cold, giving him the address before hanging up. The courts stripped her of parental rights, and no one knew where she went. Life moved forward. We found a bigger home, I excelled in school, graduated with honors, and built a career. Eventually, I bought my own apartment, with Dad and Giulia by my side every step of the way.
One stormy evening, I came home from work and saw someone sitting on a bench near my building. My heart froze. She looked up and said, “Matteo.” Then she added, “I’m your mother,” her voice barely above a whisper. She was older, unfamiliar, and suddenly the memories came rushing back.

I called Dad and Giulia. They arrived quickly, grounding me. Dad looked at me and said, “It’s your choice, son. Only you can decide if she deserves a place in your life.”
I looked at her—this stranger from my past—and felt nothing. No warmth. No connection. Just a hollow space where love should have been. The doorbell rang. She followed Dad inside, but I couldn’t stay silent.
“You’re not my mother,” I said. “I have a mom and dad—the ones who raised me, who were there when you left. I don’t know you. I don’t want your apologies. Leave, or I’ll call the police.” She cried, but I didn’t waver. She left, fading into the rain-soaked night.
I turned to Dad and Giulia, wrapped them in a hug, and whispered through tears, “I love you. Thank you for everything.” They were my real family—my foundation in the rubble. As for her? She became nothing more than a shadow in a chapter I had long since closed.
Don’t abandon your children. They didn’t ask to be born—you chose to bring them into this world. They deserve love, protection, and presence. I, Matteo, have lived that truth, and I carry its weight every single day.