13 Stepparents Who Proved Parenthood Is About Heart, Not DNA

Story 1:
n junior year of high school, my dad got remarried to the woman he’d cheated on my mom with several years prior. As an angsty teenager, I was none too thrilled with his new marriage and was honestly pretty cold towards her whenever we saw each other.
A year later, my dad was taking me to the airport on my way to college, and my stepmom took off work to meet us there and send me off with a care package. She hugged me and told me that she was proud of me, and when she stepped back, I saw that she had tears in her eyes.
It was at that moment that I realized that she wasn’t a bad person, even if she (and my dad) had done some bad things in the past. Our relationship improved dramatically after that, and now she’s like a second mother to me.

Story 2:

When I was 8 years old, my mom got married for the second time. I was very hostile toward my stepfather. He was a nice man, but the very thought of him taking Dad’s place drove me crazy. Mom was torn between us.
It wasn’t until I was 10 when everything changed. It happened when he came to school to defend me from the teacher. I started ignoring him less often and agreed to go for walks together a couple of times.
That same year, on his birthday, I made him a present for the first time: I gave him an envelope with a card where I wrote, “Will you adopt me?” It was the first time I saw a grown man crying while tucked into the shoulder of a little girl. A month later, he became my dad, and after that my daddy.

Story 3:

I have always told my children, “Just because I’m not your father doesn’t make you any less my children.” I was never able to have offspring of my own, but my grandpa grew up in an orphanage. He always said the best part of a family has nothing to do with blood.

 

 

Story 5: 

I wasn’t thrilled when my mom remarried and my stepdad moved in. He tried to connect with me, but I stayed distant. That year, I’d been saving up to buy tickets to a big game my friends and I wanted to go to, but they sold out before I could get them. I was crushed and assumed no one in the house cared. Then, the day before the game, my stepdad handed me an envelope. Inside were the game tickets I’d been dreaming of. He told me he’d seen how hard I’d worked to save up and wanted to help. I realized then he’d been paying attention all along, even when I’d been ignoring him. I finally saw he cared about me in a way I hadn’t let myself believe.

Story 6: 

Story 7:

Story 8: 

I am a stepmother, and the child turns only to me with all his problems. It’s sad. I’m teaching his dad to talk to him too.
On the other hand, I understand that it’s easier for me: I can see the situation from the outside, and have less responsibility, so it’s easier to find a common language when you are not responsible for the child 24/7. But it’s still sad.

Story 9: 

When I became a stepmom to Lila, she kept her distance. She’d always hide little mementos of her mom, like a locket she always wore. One day, she came home from school in tears, saying she’d lost it. I could see how much it meant to her, so I spent the whole evening retracing her steps, asking around, trying to find it. Finally, I found the locket under the bleachers near the school gym. I think finding it changed her mind, just a little. Since then, she’s let me in more, seeing me as someone who cares, too.

Story 10: 

All my life, I dreamed of having a twin sister. When I was 14, my parents divorced and my father married a woman with a daughter my age. My stepmother bought me and her daughter the same clothes. The funny thing is that we also had the same names.
One day we went to the beauty parlor with her and the stylist asked, “Are they twins? What’s their names?” The stepmother says our name. The stylist, “Why do they have the same name?” And my stepmother calmly says, “So we don’t get confused.”

Story 11:

Story 12:

A friend of mine is from a wealthy family. A guy twice her age, a widower with children, started courting her. She laughed, calling him a penniless old man. But one day he came to her with his 3 little children. She saw the little ones and something clicked in her heart.
Because of those children, she agreed to marry him. And she gave birth to 3 more. She supported her husband, he started his own business and became successful. She raised those kids as her own, they adore her. And her husband adores her.

Story 13:

 

Related Posts

There are ‘many unidentified bodies’. Read more

The blaze reportedly began on the first floor of the building before tearing through the entire block, with horrifying video showing the block engulfed by flames and…

Flesh-Eating Bacteria Outbreak in Florida Leaves 4 Dead A rare but deadly bacteria is spreading fast, with officials issuing an urgent public health alert ⚠

The deaths were claimed to have happened in the counties of Bay, Broward, Hillsborough, and St. John, and health officials say the bacterium has been spreading throughout…

Sad news for drivers over 70, they will soon no longer be able to

As populations age, many countries are rethinking road safety rules for drivers over 70. New proposals suggest mandatory retesting or restrictions, raising concerns about how to protect…

When they discovered this poor creature on the street, they were shocked. After bringing her to the local rescue they quickly got to work. Her after pictures and transformation are heartbreaking Check comments

Cats are known for being independent animals that spend much of their time exploring the outdoors and only entering the house for food and urinal breaks. Their…

This is what it means if you find a “bleach” spot on your underwear

Yet though there’s seemingly no end to the advantages it brings to our daily lives, it’s perhaps the fact that it’s a bottomless well of shared knowledge…

I Heard My Daughter Whisper ‘I Miss You, Dad’ into the Landline

My husband Charles died in a car crash when our daughter Susie was just two weeks old—or so I was told. His mother, Diane, handled everything: closed…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *