Sam looked me in the eyes and said he was tired of being poor — tired of me — and he left.He never called. Never wrote. For four years, silence filled the space he left behind. Until one evening, he showed up on my doorstep — gaunt, pale, and no longer the confident boy who once stormed out. His kidneys were failing, and the people he chose over me had abandoned him. His father refused to donate…

and Lindsey kicked him out, calling him a burden. “Mom… I need your help,” he whispered through tears. I had every reason to say no. But I didn’t. Because I’m his mother — and even when love isn’t returned, it doesn’t disappear. I got tested. I was a match. And I gave him a part of myself once more. As we recovered, Sam sat by my hospital bed,

eyes full of guilt. “You were always there,” he said, “even when I didn’t deserve you.” Forgiveness doesn’t erase the past, but it opens the door to healing. Sam finally saw that real love doesn’t come wrapped in money — it shows up when everything else falls apart. This time, he didn’t walk away. He walked with me.