Afterward, he turned toward Sarah.
“Loving Emma does not make you her mother.”
Sarah nodded.
To my surprise, she looked relieved rather than hurt.
It was as though she had been carrying a role that had become too heavy, but had been afraid to put it down.
Therapy helped us untangle the confusion Emma had absorbed.
She had believed that affection was a competition.
She thought whichever woman attended the most events, bought the best gifts, or helped her first had earned the right to be called Mom.
We taught her that love did not require replacing anyone.
Sarah remained part of Emma’s life.
I never wanted my daughter to lose someone who genuinely cared about her.
But the boundaries changed.
Sarah stopped signing up for school activities intended specifically for mothers.
She stopped answering questions that Emma should bring to me first.
Whenever Emma began telling her something important, Sarah sometimes smiled and said, “Let’s make sure your mom hears this too.”
There were no dramatic punishments.
No shouting matches.
No attempt to remove Sarah completely.
We simply began putting everyone back into the right place.
A month later, Emma’s school held a Mother-Daughter Breakfast.
I had missed the previous year because of work.
This time, Emma and I entered the cafeteria holding hands.
Halfway through breakfast, one of her teachers smiled at us.
“I’m so glad you could come,” she said. “Emma has been talking all week about bringing her mom.”
My eyes began to sting.
Across the room, Sarah was helping several volunteers serve juice.
Emma saw her and waved.
Sarah smiled and waved back.
But she stayed where she was.
She did not walk over.
She did not insert herself into the photograph.
She did not turn our moment into hers.
She simply allowed Emma and me to have it.
My daughter rested her head against my shoulder.
“I’m glad you’re here, Mom,” she whispered.
I placed my arm around her.
“So am I.”
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