After osteoporosis made it hard for me to move at 81, my son Tyler and his wife Macy placed me in a nursing home. I begged to stay—my late husband built that house—but Tyler insisted, “It’s too big. We need the space.”
I wrote Tyler daily from the nursing home, telling him I missed him. He never replied. For two years, I sat alone, waiting. No visits. No calls. Just silence.
Then one day, a man appeared at the front desk. I rushed over, thinking it was Tyler. But it was Ron—my late son’s childhood best friend. “Mom,” he said, hugging me tight. “I’ve been looking for you.”
Ron explained everything: Tyler and Macy died in a house fire last year. My letters had piled up in the abandoned home. I wept. Despite our last painful moments, Tyler was still my son.
Ron sat with me for hours, comforting me. Then he said the words I didn’t expect: “Come home with me. I’ll take care of you.”
He wasn’t my blood, but he loved me like a son. And that love brought me home.