WE ADOPTED A 4-YEAR-OLD GIRL — JUST A MONTH LATER, MY WIFE DEMANDED, “WE SHOULD GIVE HER BACK.”

WE ADOPTED A 4-YEAR-OLD GIRL — JUST A MONTH LATER, MY WIFE DEMANDED, “WE SHOULD GIVE HER BACK.”

My wife, Claire, and I tried for years to have a baby. When that failed, she suggested adoption. It felt right.

After months of waiting, we met Sophie — a bright-eyed 4-year-old who had been in foster care since infancy. From day one, she clung to us, calling us Mommy and Daddy before it was even official.

And then, one month after bringing her home, I walked in from work, and Sophie barreled into me, wrapping her little arms around my legs. Her voice trembled.
“I don’t wanna leave.”

Confused, I knelt down. “Leave to where, sweetheart?”
Her lips trembled, and tears welled in her eyes. “I don’t wanna go away again. I wanna stay with you and Mommy.”
A cold chill ran through me. “That won’t happen,” I assured her, stroking her hair. But then, Claire stepped into the hallway, her face pale, her expression unreadable.
“We need to talk.”
I sent Sophie to her room, promising her everything was fine. She nodded, sniffling, and went, but I could feel her little heart racing against mine.
The moment her door closed, Claire turned to me, her jaw tight.
“We need to give her back.”
I blinked, sure I had misheard. “What?”
When she told me her reason, I took a step back.

…She said, “I don’t love her.”

The words hit me like a punch to the chest.

“She’s sweet, and I know she didn’t do anything wrong,” Claire went on, her voice shaking. “But every time I look at her, I feel… disconnected. I thought the bond would come. That it would just click like everyone says. But it hasn’t. And I feel like a terrible person, but I’m being honest.”

I didn’t know what to say. I stared at the woman I loved—the same woman who had decorated Sophie’s room with little butterflies, who had cried when Sophie called her “Mommy” for the first time, who had insisted we pack her favorite stuffed bunny when we went on a weekend trip just two weeks ago.

And yet here she was, saying she wanted to give her back like Sophie was a coat that didn’t fit.

“You’re scared,” I said finally. “This is hard. It’s a huge change. But she’s not a mistake to undo.”

“I feel trapped,” Claire whispered. “And guilty, and resentful. I wanted to be a mother—I still want to be a mother—but I don’t think I can do this. With her.

I sat down. My heart broke in two. Not just for Claire—but for Sophie, who was in the next room, probably curled up with that same stuffed bunny, listening through the door.

I took a deep breath. “Claire, I love you. But I can’t send that little girl back into the system. She’s not a return. She’s our daughter. And if you walk away from this, I won’t stop you—but I’m staying. Sophie stays.”

Claire stared at me, stunned. Tears welled in her eyes. She opened her mouth to argue… then closed it. After a long silence, she walked into our bedroom and shut the door.

I sat there in the hallway for a moment, stunned and still.

Then I stood up and walked into Sophie’s room. She was sitting on her bed, clutching the bunny, eyes wide and wet.

“I’m staying,” I said, kneeling beside her. “You don’t ever have to worry about going away again. You’re home, okay?”

She nodded slowly and reached for me.

And in that moment, with her small arms wrapped around me, I knew—I wasn’t just saying it to comfort her.

I meant it.

Forever.

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