Diane spent her childhood longing for a mother who never prioritized her. At just 8 years old, she begged to join her mom Erika on a “business trip,” only to be dropped off at her aunt Karina and uncle Roger’s house with empty promises of Disneyland. Days turned into months, then years, with Erika’s sporadic phone calls full of more broken promises.
Karina and Roger raised Diane with warmth and stability, but a part of her still yearned for Erika’s affection. That hope flickered again when Erika called from Italy: she was getting married and invited Diane to visit Milan. When Diane asked if she could live with her there, Erika said, “Not yet — maybe for college.”
Years later, during Diane’s senior year, Erika called again, urging her to visit Milan. Reluctantly, Diane agreed. But the reunion was cold from the start — Erika criticized her clothes, weight, and treated her more like a project than a daughter. Over dinner, Erika dropped a bomb: “You’ll be staying here now. My husband wants children, and since I can’t have more, you’ll do.”
Feeling like a prop in Erika’s new life, Diane took money under the pretense of sightseeing and instead bought a ticket home. When she returned, Karina and Roger embraced her. “You’ve always had a home here,” Roger said. “You don’t need her approval to know you’re loved.” From then on, Diane stopped chasing Erika’s love. She had already found it—in the quiet, unconditional care of the people who raised her.