MY HUSBAND KICKED ME OUT AFTER FINDING OUT I WAS PREGNANT — 26 YEARS LATER, OUR SON FOUND HIM

I was madly in love with Richard. We met in high school and were completely smitten with each other. When he suggested we run away and get married, I thought it was the best idea in the world. Then, at 18, I found out I was pregnant. I was thrilled and didn’t waste a second before telling Richard.

But that was the exact moment everything changed. Richard went crazy — he acted like he hated me and threw me out of the house. He spread lies, telling everyone I had cheated on him and that the baby wasn’t his. He vanished from my life and refused to speak to me.

At the time, I thought my world had ended — but it turned out to be an incredible new beginning. Despite everything, I had my son, Greg, and I raised him on my own. He grew into an amazing man, and by the age of 26, he had become one of the wealthiest people in our city. But Greg had one obsession — he wanted to find his father. And one day, he did.

He never told me how he found him. Just showed up at my front door one Sunday afternoon, looking pale and shaking slightly. He said, “Mom… I found him. I met him.”

I sat down, trying to process what that meant. My stomach felt like it dropped to the floor.


Greg continued, “His name isn’t Richard anymore. He goes by Rick Saunders. Lives in this tiny coastal town in Oregon, working at a boat repair shop. He’s married. Has two kids. A whole other life.”

I didn’t know what to say. After 26 years of silence and pain, the man who once called me the love of his life was just… out there, fixing boats and raising a family.

Greg paused, then added, “I talked to him, Mom. Face to face.”

I felt my breath catch.
“He said he always wondered if you were telling the truth… that maybe he made a mistake. But then he said something else.”

I braced myself.

“He said his dad told him not to believe you. That his father showed him some letter ‘proving’ you were cheating. Turns out, it was fake. His dad hated you. Thought you were beneath their family.”

I couldn’t speak. I always knew Richard’s father didn’t like me, but I didn’t realize he’d gone that far.

Greg looked so torn. “He cried when I told him I was his son. Said he’d lived with guilt, but didn’t know how to fix it. He asked if you’d be willing to see him.”

For a few seconds, I wanted to scream. After all those years of struggle, of working two jobs, of crying silently while my son slept… now he wanted to talk?

But then I looked at Greg. This man I had raised. A man with his father’s eyes and none of his cowardice.

So I said yes.

Greg arranged everything. A week later, we met at a quiet park halfway between Oregon and where we lived. I hadn’t seen Richard in over two decades, but the second he walked toward us, I recognized him.


He looked older, of course. Thinner. A little more weathered. But the guilt on his face was unmistakable.

He didn’t try to hug me. Just stood there and whispered, “I’m so sorry, Talya. I was young and stupid, and I believed the worst. My father manipulated everything. I should’ve known better.”

It took everything in me not to burst into tears. But I kept my voice calm. “You should have come to me. Asked. Instead, you let me go through hell.”

“I know,” he said quietly. “I’ve lived with that every day. And I know I have no right to ask for anything. I just wanted to say it. Out loud. And thank you… for raising him. He’s… incredible.”


We sat and talked for two hours. I learned about his life, his regrets, the therapy he’d gone through after his father passed. His wife knew about me — apparently, he’d told her everything years ago.

I asked if his wife knew he was meeting me, and he nodded. “She encouraged it. Said I’d never forgive myself if I didn’t.”

After we parted ways, I wasn’t angry anymore. Just… peaceful.

Greg asked me in the car, “Do you forgive him?”

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And I said, “I don’t know if I do. But I understand him now. That’s enough.”

A few months later, I got a letter from Richard’s wife — a handwritten note. She thanked me for being kind to him. Said Richard had started sleeping better since that meeting. Said their kids were curious about Greg and would love to meet him one day.

Life moves in strange circles. I never thought I’d see Richard again. Never thought I’d be able to sit across from him without wanting to scream. But here we were.

The truth? Sometimes forgiveness doesn’t mean forgetting. It just means letting go of the weight you’ve carried for too long.


I held on to pain for 26 years. And finally, I let it go — not for him, but for me. And for Greg.

If you’ve ever carried anger for too long, maybe it’s time to loosen your grip. Forgiveness isn’t weakness — it’s freedom.

💬 If this story touched you, don’t forget to share it with someone who needs to hear it.
❤️ Like and spread the message — someone out there is holding on to a pain they don’t need to carry anymore.

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