My Mom Forbade Me From Seeing My Dad—And One Day, He Called, Saying, “This Is an Emergency!”
I grew up believing my father didn’t want me.
The last time I saw him, I was two years old. I still remember my mother’s voice, raw with fury, as she screamed, **”I never want to see you again!”** I remember the slam of the car door. The way his taillights disappeared into the night.
And after that? **He was gone.**
At first, I thought it was just the way things worked. Some kids had two parents; some, like me, had just one. But as I grew older, I started to ask questions. **Where was he? Why didn’t he visit?**
When I was ten, I begged my mom, “Please, I want to visit Dad!”
She barely looked up from her book. “No. He has a new family now, Alexandra. He doesn’t want to see you.”
That day, something inside me shattered.
### **The Call That Changed Everything**
Years passed. I buried my hurt, convinced that if my dad really cared, he would’ve fought for me. But deep down, there was always that aching **what if?**
Then, out of nowhere, my phone rang.
An unknown number. I almost didn’t answer.
But the moment I did, a voice I hadn’t heard in **fifteen years** filled my ear.
It was shaky, desperate. **”Alexandra! This is an emergency! Can you come see me?”**
My heart stopped.
“Dad?” I whispered.
“Please,” he begged. “I don’t have much time.”
My hands trembled as I wrote down the address he gave me. **I didn’t know what I was walking into, but I had to go.**
### **The Truth at Last**
When I arrived, I nearly turned around and ran.
The house was small, run-down. Nothing like what I imagined my dad’s “new family” would live in. I swallowed hard and knocked.
The door creaked open—and there he was.
Not the strong man I had faint memories of, but someone **thin, tired, sick.** His face lit up with something between relief and sorrow.
“You came,” he whispered.
I stepped inside cautiously. “What’s going on? Mom told me you never wanted to see me.”
His eyes darkened. “She told you that?”
I nodded, my throat tightening. “Was it true?”
He let out a broken laugh, running a hand through his thinning hair. “God, no. Alexandra, I tried. For years, I tried. I sent letters, gifts, I even fought for custody. Your mother… she blocked everything. Changed numbers. Told the court I was a danger to you.”
I staggered back. **What?**
“I would never have stopped trying if I knew you wanted to see me.” His voice cracked. “I was convinced you hated me.”
Tears burned my eyes. **Everything I believed had been a lie.**
“Dad… why now?” I whispered.
He exhaled shakily, pulling out a thick folder from the table. “Because I don’t have long, sweetheart. And I need to tell you the truth before it’s too late.”
And then he handed me the papers. **And my entire world changed.**