I always felt like I didn’t belong to my family. My mother, Elena, clearly favored my two older sisters, Marina and Sofia: they received all her attention, gifts, and support, while I felt left out. I did my best to be the “perfect” daughter: I listened, helped around the house, all to earn her smile and approval. In vain—I felt like I didn’t matter to her.
For my eighteenth birthday, she hit me with a cruel sentence:

— You don’t live here anymore. The apartment belongs to your sisters. Go live somewhere else.
I was devastated: this house was all I had, and I didn’t know where to turn. I tried to explain that it was unfair: Marina and Sofia had long enjoyed separate housing, education, and financial support, while I was the family “outsider.”
The only person who was always there for me was my grandfather, my mother’s father: he warmed my heart when everything else was cold. Every summer, I went to help him in his village garden: I caught the bread and pies, and there I felt useful and loved. When he died, everything fell apart again: my mother almost ignored me, my sisters teased me by giving me their old clothes and devouring all the good food. I grew up believing no one loved me, despite all my efforts.

When I was kicked out, I found a job as a nurse at the hospital. It was hard, but my colleagues respected me. Slowly, I rebuilt myself: work, caring for patients, and trying to forget the pain of the past. One day, my boyfriend Michał noticed my sadness and supported me: thanks to him, I felt I was no longer alone. Later, Tomasz came into my life: a good man who helped me find an apartment and a surgical position, my chance to change my destiny. With Michał, we moved in together and I soon discovered I was pregnant. All this time, Tomasz was our pillar, our confidant: he was the father I never had.

One day, at his place, I found an old photo: my grandfather… and Tomasz. I learned that Tomasz was actually my grandfather’s brother, and that he had been secretly watching over me. The most incredible revelation: the woman I always called “mom” was not my biological mother—my real mother was her sister, whom she hated out of jealousy. Everything made sense now: why I was always the “other,” why I was rejected.
Today, I have a home, a loving husband, children, and a career. For the first time, I have a family of my own and I can finally be happy.