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I Discovered My Mother’s Diary: After Reading It, I Understood Why She Treated Me Differently From My Siblings

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I found my mothers diary tucked away in the back of an old wardrobe. When I turned its pages, the puzzle of why she had always treated me unlike my brother and sister finally snapped into place.

From early childhood I sensed a flaw, as if I were a mismatched piece in the family picture. My brother, James, and my younger sister, Emily, seemed to fit perfectly into Mothers heart. She whispered sweet words to them, offered patience and tender care.

To me she kept a cool distance that has always hurt like a windchill on a winter night. I never knew the source of that chill, so I spent years inventing explanations for myself.

Had I failed her expectations? Had I done something wrong? Those questions followed me like shadowy companions until the day I uncovered a secret that would reshape my view of everything.

Mother passed away a few months ago. Only now have I gathered the strength to sort through her things. James and Emily handled the paperwork and the formalities. I took on the part nobody wanted: sifting through the personal trinkets that lay untouched.

The wardrobe, heavy with old dresses, still smelled of the perfume she favored. My fingers brushed the fabrics as I recalled cold evenings of my youth, when I longed for her closeness and received only a frosty stare and a whispered, I dont have time now.

At the very bottom of a drawer I discovered something I had never imagineda dustcovered notebook bound with a frayed ribbon. I opened it gingerly, heart hammering louder with each turn. The first page bore only my mothers name, Margaret, and the year1978, the year I was born.

The opening chapters were filled with teenage dreams and trivial daily notes. I read them with a blend of sorrow and curiosity. It was only when I reached the entries from that autumn that the floor seemed to drop from beneath me.

Today I told John Im pregnant. He stayed silent for a long breath, then said, I cant, Margaret. You know I have a family. I never promised you anything more. He walked away, leaving me alone on a park bench. I thought I would die of grief. How will I tell my husband? How will I tell the children?

I kept reading, each line tearing at me more than the last. The truth I had unconsciously avoided all my life unfolded before my eyes. The man I thought was my father was not my biological dad. The man my mother loved without hope had rejected her, leaving her to raise a child alone. Her marriage survived, but it was already marked by the scar of my existence.

I gave birth to a girl. When I look at her I see his face. I dont know if Ill ever love her as I loved my other children. She is a living proof of my weakness, my shame. Every glance at her hurts.

I read that sentence over and over, tears refusing to stop. At last I understood why mother had always seemed different to me. I was an unconscious reminder of her greatest mistake, of a love that never came to fruition. She could not separate the pain from the child she had birthed.

I sat for a long time in her bedroom, notebook cradled on my knees, weeping for both our fates. Anger, regret, sorrowand above all a vast sense of loss for the years when love was replaced by indifference. Yet, for the first time, I felt compassion for her. How much must she have suffered, keeping that secret for so long?

In the days that followed I began to see my own life through a new lens. I had always feared rejection, doubted that I deserved affectionnow I knew why. My mother had carried a grief that she unintentionally passed on to me. This revelation forced me to reconsider who I truly aman unwanted daughter or a woman who, despite everything, can still love?

I told James and Emily about the diary. Their faces turned pale. James pulled me into a hug, Emily sobbed for a long while. They admitted they had always felt I was treated differently, though they could not name it. Their love for me did not waver; if anything, it grew stronger.

Today, though the wounds are still fresh, the question why? no longer haunts me. I know my mother could never rise above her own trauma. I have forgiven her, because I understand how heavy a secret that keeps bleeding can be. I have decided not to let the past define the rest of my life. I have started therapy, rebuilding my sense of worth, learning to love myself in a way I never did before.

Even if I was born from anothers mistake, my life is worth as much as any others. I have the right to be happy, to accept myself, and to love, even if my mother never knew how to love me.

Perhaps now, armed with the truth, I can truly learn to livefree of fear, free of shame, in harmony with who I am.

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