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I got pregnant when I was in Grade 10. My parents looked at me coldly and said, “You brought shame to this family. From now on, we are no longer our children.”

Posted on January 13, 2026 By user No Comments on I got pregnant when I was in Grade 10. My parents looked at me coldly and said, “You brought shame to this family. From now on, we are no longer our children.”

I became pregnant when I was in tenth grade.

The moment I saw the two lines, my hands began to shake. I was terrified—so frightened I could barely stand. Before I could even think about what to do, everything collapsed at once.

My parents looked at me with cold disgust.

“This is a disgrace to this family,” my father said. “From today on, you are no longer our child.”

His words struck harder than any slap.

That night, rain poured down relentlessly. My mother threw my torn backpack out the door and shoved me onto the street. I had no money. No shelter. Nowhere to go.

Holding my stomach, swallowing the pain, I walked away from what had once been the safest place in my life—without turning back.

I gave birth to my daughter in a cramped eight-square-meter rented room. It was poor, suffocating, and full of whispers and judgment. I raised her with everything I had. When she turned two, I left my province and took her to Saigon. By day I worked as a waitress; by night, I studied a vocational course.

Eventually, fate shifted.

I found an opportunity in online business. One step at a time, I built my own company.
Six years later, I bought a house.
Ten years later, I opened a chain of stores.
Twenty years later, my assets exceeded 200 billion VND.

By every measure, I had succeeded.

Yet the pain of being abandoned by my own parents never truly faded.

One day, I decided to return.

Not to forgive.
But to show them what they had lost.

I drove my Mercedes back to my hometown. The house stood exactly as I remembered—old, crumbling, and even more neglected. Rust covered the gate. Paint peeled from the walls. Weeds choked the yard.

I stood at the door, took a breath, and knocked three times.

A young woman—around eighteen—opened the door.

I froze.

She looked exactly like me. Her eyes, her nose, even the way she frowned—it was like staring at my younger self.

“Who are you looking for?” she asked gently.

Before I could answer, my parents stepped outside. When they saw me, they stopped dead. My mother covered her mouth, tears filling her eyes.

I smiled coldly.
“So… now you regret it?”

Suddenly, the girl rushed over and grabbed my mother’s hand.

“Grandma, who is this?”

Grandma?

My chest tightened violently. I turned toward my parents.

“Who… who is this child?”

My mother collapsed into tears.
“She… she’s your brother.”

Everything inside me shattered.

“That’s impossible!” I cried. “I raised my child myself! What are you talking about?”

My father sighed, his voice weak with age.
“We adopted a baby who was left at our gate… eighteen years ago.”

My body went numb.
“Left… at the gate?”

My mother retrieved an old diaper from a cabinet. I recognized it instantly—the one I had wrapped my newborn in.

It felt like my heart was being stabbed.

Through sobs, she explained,
“After you left, his father came looking for the child. You were already gone to Saigon. He drank, caused trouble, then disappeared.

Eighteen years ago, one morning, I opened the door and found a newborn lying there. Only this diaper. I knew it was connected to you. I thought something terrible had happened to you… that maybe you were gone forever.”

Her voice broke.

“We failed you once. But we couldn’t abandon this child. We raised him as our own. We never struck him. Never mistreated him.”

I trembled.

That diaper—I had hidden it carefully. No one knew about it.

There was only one explanation.

My daughter’s biological father had another child… and abandoned him at the very place he knew I’d been thrown out.

I looked at the girl—the child I hadn’t given birth to, yet who looked so much like me.

She asked shyly,
“Grandpa… why are you crying?”

I pulled her into my arms and broke down like never before.

My parents dropped to their knees.
“Forgive us. We were wrong. Please don’t blame the child.”

I looked at them, and twenty years of resentment quietly dissolved—not because they deserved forgiveness, but because I understood something deeper.

This child needed a family.
And I needed to let the past go.

I wiped my tears and said,
“I didn’t come back for revenge. I came back to reclaim what’s mine.”

I took the girl’s hand and smiled.
“From now on, you’re my sister.”

Behind us, my parents cried like children.

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