Story cover for UNMOTHERED by S1m1Dutta
UNMOTHERED
  • WpView
    Reads 66
  • WpVote
    Votes 15
  • WpPart
    Parts 6
  • WpHistory
    Time 13m
  • WpView
    Reads 66
  • WpVote
    Votes 15
  • WpPart
    Parts 6
  • WpHistory
    Time 13m
Complete, First published Jul 09, 2025
She left me when I was nine, dropping me at my father's doorstep like I was a box she didn't need to carry anymore.

For fifteen years, she never came back. She never called, never texted. But I saw her on Facebook, posting pictures with her new family, smiling with the daughters she decided to love.

I was her first child. The one she left behind.

Now, I'm 24, trying to break free from a father who only knows how to scold and a mother who only knows how to forget.

This is my story. A story of learning to live when the people who should have loved you never did.
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add UNMOTHERED to your library and receive updates
or
#813womanpower
Content Guidelines
You may also like
The leaving 11 years on on going stopped up dating for a awhile  by CarolOBrien1
2 parts Complete Mature
The leaving. It was hard, tragic , painful, yet it had to be done, I needed to save my life. I didn't want to start again, this would be the story of finding myself, pulling myself back together, reuniting the happy go lucky youngster I had once been. The shock of leaving took more of a toll on me than I thought it would. I had asked two people to help me move out of the house I had shared with my partner for 8 years, we had been together 23 years in total. The move was done in total secrecy, my partner could never know in advance, it was a very scary time. I had moved various things out of the house and secured a rent on a property nearby. The house I picked was near the School the children went to, and my oldest lad was going to be near his best friend. My Mother told me of the property it was advertised on the web, we both went and had a look, even that was scary, I didn't want to be seen by anyone and became paranoid that I would be caught out. For many months I lived on a new kind of fear, the fear of someone finding out that I planned to leave my abusive partner, though of course no one knew my seemingly happy, funny, generous partner was abusive. Finding the house was one thing, getting the various companies to connect the house and exchanging the information of my current address so they could varify that I was, who I said I was almost drove me mad. The day came to leave, My Mother and a very dear Friend came round as early as possible, we packed as much as we could. This included taking the boys clothes, bedding, toys, stuff from the garden, my stuff. We had 3 cars the packing seem to take all day. By the end we had to get going to be able to unpack, leaving me time to pick up the boys from School and settle them in their new home. I couldn't do it at first,I started to cry then scream, to leave the world I had put so much of my life into, and now in a split second would be leaving was breaking my heart.
You may also like
Slide 1 of 10
A Heart Rewritten cover
The leaving 11 years on on going stopped up dating for a awhile  cover
FINDING June cover
My Mafia Princess  cover
I Am Hated, Or So I Thought Volume 1 cover
Evolution  cover
Wildhearts cover
Her Breaking Point cover
Safe (Being edited) cover
intrepidity cover

A Heart Rewritten

26 parts Ongoing Mature

I thought moving back to my father's country would be a fresh start-a chance to find myself in the place I was born but never really knew. I didn't expect to fall so fast for someone who would break me in ways I still struggle to name. What followed shattered everything: my trust, my voice, my sense of who I was. But this isn't just a story about pain. It's about the slow, quiet strength of rebuilding. About family in its most fragile form. About learning that healing isn't a straight line-and sometimes, love finds you when you're no longer looking for it. This is the story of how I got lost, how I came home, and how, one day, I looked in the mirror and finally recognized the girl staring back.