
Inside was a photo album.
My hands trembled as I opened it. Every page was filled with pictures of my daughter growing up — birthdays, school events, tiny apartments, part-time jobs, and smiling strangers I didn’t recognize. She had built an entire life without me in it.
Then I noticed the notes written beneath each picture.
“At 14, I stopped believing I deserved love.”
“At 16, my friend’s mother hugged me for the first time after I cried.”
“At 18, I left because staying hurt more.”
Each sentence felt like a knife twisting deeper into my chest.
At the very bottom of the box was a small wrapped gift and a letter.
I opened the letter first.
“Mom,” it began, “for years I hated you. What you said on my birthday became the voice in my head every single day. But leaving taught me something important — your cruelty did not define my worth.”
I broke down sobbing before I could continue.
The final lines read:
“I’m sending this because I don’t want to carry anger anymore. Inside the gift is something I once wished you’d give me.”
With shaking fingers, I unwrapped the box.
Inside was a framed drawing I made for her when she was little. Across it, in careful handwriting, she had written:
“I was always worth loving.”




