Eric’s journey began with a fragile hope that biology might finally answer the ache in his chest. Instead, his birth mother’s cruelty tore open every old wound, forcing him to confront a devastating reality: some people walk away, no matter how desperately you want them to stay. In that moment of rejection, he felt more alone than he had at sixteen, clutching that worn photograph in the dark.
Yet the people who ran toward him, not away, were the ones who had quietly chosen him all along. The Johnsons’ fear, their tears, and their unwavering words—“You’ve been our son since we met you”—reframed everything he thought he knew about family. Adoption wasn’t a consolation prize; it was a declaration. Eric didn’t lose a mother that night. He finally recognized the parents who had already made him theirs in every way that counts.