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    Home » I Gave Up My Daughter Right After Birth
    Story Of Life

    I Gave Up My Daughter Right After Birth

    qtcs_adminBy qtcs_admin12/04/20254 Mins Read
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    I Gave Up My Daughter Right After Birth—Then I Took Her Back… and That Saved My Life

    Sometimes life throws you a challenge just when you’re at your lowest—morally, physically, emotionally. I survived cancer, loneliness, and the fear of motherhood… and I was about to give up the most precious thing I had. But at the last moment, I changed my mind.

    My name is Ashley, I’m 31 years old, and I’m from Nashville, Tennessee. But everything I want to share with you happened far from home—in a country where I didn’t know the language or the people. That’s where I became a mother. And that’s also where I almost left my daughter behind.

    When I was 24, I received a diagnosis that felt like it pulled the ground out from under me—cervical cancer. Everything happened fast: surgery, recovery, fear. The doctors told me I would most likely never be able to have children. I didn’t argue—I just accepted it. I decided my life would take a different path. No family, no kids. Just a career, travel, freedom.

    And that’s exactly how it went. I built a solid career in finance, moved to Chicago with a work contract, and saw half the world. I had relationships, but nothing serious. I didn’t let myself fall in love, never made long-term plans. I was living a half-life. And I thought that was enough—or so I believed.

    One day, I started feeling odd—weakness, dizziness. I blamed it on stress. But when I went to a gynecologist for a routine check-up, I got shocking news:

    “You’re pregnant. Four months along.”

    I couldn’t believe it. Me? Infertile? How? A mistake? No. Everything was confirmed.

    I panicked. I was in shock. I didn’t want this baby. I didn’t have a stable partner, no plan, and I definitely didn’t want to be a mother. I told no one—not my parents, not my friends, not even my coworkers. I hid everything. I wore loose clothes, barely gained any weight, trying to pretend it wasn’t happening.

    Then came month nine. I had this dream of traveling to South America—something I’d wanted since I was a teenager. Everything was already paid for, and I thought, why not? I flew to Brazil. And there, in the middle of tropical rain and Portuguese conversations, I went into labor.

    I gave birth in a small hospital near Fortaleza. I named my daughter Lily. But I felt nothing. Just exhaustion and fear. I even considered leaving her there, in that foreign country where I knew no one.

    But the poverty I witnessed in those places terrified me. I realized—if I was going to leave Lily, at least let it be back home, in the States. I contacted the American embassy. They helped me get her documents. After a long trip with multiple layovers, I finally returned home.

    I was drained, broke, and holding a newborn. The very next day, without hesitation, I took her to a child welfare center. I explained that I couldn’t manage. The social workers didn’t judge me. They just quietly took her in.

    I went home, collapsed in bed… and felt completely empty. Everything felt surreal, like it wasn’t really happening to me. Two days later, I went back to work.

    But a few weeks later, I got a call from the shelter.

    “There’s something wrong with your daughter. She’s not eating. Not responding. She just cries.”

    I went there. I don’t even know why. Maybe I just wanted to be sure it wasn’t my fault. But when I saw her—tiny, dull-eyed, wrapped in a blanket that wasn’t hers—something inside me snapped.

    She recognized me. She didn’t cry. She didn’t smile. She just stared—like she was waiting. And I knew: she was mine. She needed me, just like I needed her.

    I went home that night and didn’t sleep at all. The next morning, I went to work and told everything—to my boss, my coworkers, my friends. I didn’t want to hide anymore.

    A week later, I brought Lily home.

    At first, it was hard. Sleepless nights, fear, exhaustion. But day by day—she got stronger, and I got more grounded. We got used to each other. We became a family.

    Today, Lily is already three years old. She laughs, runs through the house, sings. And I’m alive again. Really alive. No mask, no running. I’m a mom. And even though it’s just the two of us—we’re happy.

    I don’t know if I’ll ever meet a man who’ll love both of us. But that doesn’t matter anymore. What matters most is that one day, I found the strength to choose love over fear. And I don’t regret it for a single second.

    Lily is my salvation. And my redemption.

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