My real dad left when I was six, and my stepdad, Mark, stepped in to raise me. But I never accepted him.
No matter how hard he tried attending my school plays, teaching me to ride a bike, showing up at every parent-teacher conference I kept him at arm’s length.
Deep down, I felt like loving him would betray my biological father, even though he was long gone. At 18, I left home for college and never looked back. I didn’t call.
I didn’t visit. For five years, silence grew between us like a wall. Then, one winter morning, my mom called.
Her voice trembled as she told me Mark was very sick. By the time I made it home, he was gone. At the funeral, my mom handed me his old, worn-out jacket.
“It’s the only thing he wanted you to have,” she said softly. Angry and hurt, I tossed the jacket into the back of my closet, refusing to look at it. To me, it was just a symbol of the man I never appreciated.