I grew up knowing only one parent my dad, Greg. My mom, Jessica, left the day I was born. There were no birthday cards, no phone calls, just silence. My dad raised me alone, never speaking badly about her. Life wasn’t easy. He worked two jobs to keep us afloat, and by age ten, I was cooking meals and helping around the house. Despite the struggles, our home was filled with love. My dad always said, “I love you more than I hate what she did,” and those words shaped my life.
Years later, I built a successful company, LaunchPad, to help young creatives chase their dreams. At 21, I was finally proud of the life my dad and I had built. Then, one Saturday morning, everything changed. My dad opened the door and there she was. Jessica. My mom. The woman I’d spent years imagining. But she wasn’t there to reconnect. She handed me a manila envelope, smiling like it was a gift. Inside was a DNA test showing my dad wasn’t my biological father. She then slid over legal papers, claiming she deserved a share of my company.
In that moment, clarity hit me. Family isn’t about blood. It’s about who shows up, who sacrifices, and who loves you unconditionally. I looked at my dad and said firmly, “You are my real father. Nothing changes that.” Jessica later tried to fight in court, but the truth came out — she had abandoned me and never once contributed to my upbringing. The court sided with us, and she walked away empty-handed.With the storm finally behind us, my dad and I launched The Backbone Project, a fund to help young people who’ve been left behind, just like I once was. Standing on stage at the launch event, I realized something profound: forgiveness isn’t about excusing the past it’s about choosing to build a better future. My dad didn’t just raise me; he gave me the strength to become someone who could help others rise, too.