My MIL Called My Kids ‘Fake Grandkids’ Because They’re Adopted, But Karma Made Her Eat Her Words — Story of the Day

My MIL Called My Kids ‘Fake Grandkids’ Because They’re Adopted, But Karma Made Her Eat Her Words — Story of the Day

 

Sad kids sitting on the floor | Source: Midjourney
Sad kids sitting on the floor | Source: Midjourney

I spent $30,000 trying to become a Mom, only to hear my mother-in-law call my adopted kids “fake” in front of guests. I stayed quiet then. But not for long.

I spent thirty thousand dollars trying to become a mother. And not a single cent preparing for the silence that followed when it didn’t work.

I was thirty-eight, and I couldn’t have children. It was a sentence I’d learned to say without blinking.

To doctors. To friends. To myself.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

“Should we try again?”

My husband Andrew asked that every time I came home from the clinic.

I just took off my shoes. And said nothing.

Sometimes, I went straight to the kitchen to peel apples we wouldn’t eat — just to hear something soft and harmless in a sharp and loud world.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

We’d been together nearly ten years. Andrew was not the hero from the novel, but he was the man who always held my coat and made the tea I liked. He never blamed me. But I blamed myself.

Maybe with another woman, he’d already have kids. Maybe I am the dead end.

“You still have time,” my MIL Gloria used to say. “I had Andrew at thirty-eight. It’s still possible. You just need more faith. And maybe… a little less chemistry in your system.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

That was her style — passive-aggression disguised as grace.

“She didn’t mean it badly,” Andrew said later. “She’s just… old-school.”

“No. She doesn’t think I’m a real woman if I haven’t given birth.”

He didn’t argue. He just hugged me. And somehow, that made it worse. That hug said, “Let’s not talk about this anymore.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

One evening, I got stuck watching a video on TikTok.

A little girl hugged a woman and called her “Mommy” for the first time. The woman cried. So did I.

“What if we… Adopt?”

Andrew froze, the remote still in his hand. “Are you serious?”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

I nodded.

“I’m not against it. But if we do this… let’s adopt two. So they won’t be alone.”

I laughed. “Two? We can’t even pack for a weekend trip without arguing.”

“That’s different. We didn’t have a reason to be our best selves.”

That got me.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

The process was long.

Meanwhile, we learned more about childhood trauma than some therapists probably do in three courses.

And the one thing they kept repeating was:

“Don’t expect gratitude. They won’t run into your arms. They don’t trust people.”

After seven months, we got the call.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

“There are two children. They are not biological siblings but are emotionally inseparable. A girl and a boy. They have different backgrounds and personalities but hold on to each other like anchors. If we separate them, we’ll lose them both.”

We went to meet them.

The girl was afro-american with deep brown eyes. Her name was Amara. The boy, with Asian features, stood back, clutching a battered teddy bear like a shield. His name was Liam.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

There was no magic. No tears. Just silence. And us.

“Hi. I’m Hannah.”

A pause.

“Can I just sit here next to you?”

That was our beginning.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

We signed the paperwork two days later.

I sent the news to the family. A photo, too. Everyone replied with something like:

“Congratulations!” or “They’re adorable!”

Everyone… Except for one person.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

Adapting wasn’t a fairytale. I didn’t hear a single “Mom” for weeks. But I heard slammed doors.

I heard Liam hurling toys at the wall until the plastic cracked and pieces flew like shrapnel.

I heard Amara crying at night under her blanket. Sometimes, I just sat across from her in silence. I knew she needed space, not speeches.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

One afternoon, Liam collapsed on the sidewalk and screamed. Like something inside him broke in half.

People stopped. Stared. I could feel them judging the “bad mother.”

“What are you doing?” a woman snapped.

“Waiting. Until he finishes crying.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

She shrugged with a disapproving glance and walked away. And I stayed there, sitting beside a little boy who no longer trusted the world. I didn’t touch him. I didn’t yell. I just stayed.

“Mom, why aren’t you mad at me?” he asked one day after another one of his “storms.”

“Because I know you’re hurting.”

He looked at me like he was seeing me for the first time.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

Two weeks in, we started to breathe. Liam began whispering stories to his teddy bear, and Amara let me braid her hair. The braid was terrible — crooked and lumpy — but she sat still for it. And that alone felt like winning a war.

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“I want to throw them a little celebration,” I told Andrew one night while wiping cookie dough from my hands.

“Isn’t it a bit… early? They’re not really… with us yet.”

“Exactly. That’s why we all need it.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

A few days later, I cut out paper garlands in soft sunset colors. Amara helped me glue stars on them. Liam picked out cupcake liners.

And… I invited Andrew’s mother. We never really talked about how she felt about it.

“I’m not sure if it’s the right moment,” I told Andrew. “But the kids deserve to know they have a grandmother.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

“She loves children. She’ll come around.”

But something in me whispered that it was a calm that felt like the beginning of a storm.

The party was meant to be quiet. Just Andrew, the kids, and Gloria. A soft moment to let Amara and Liam feel like part of our small family.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

So when the door opened and I saw her standing there with two other women, dressed like brunch at a country club, I felt my stomach twist.

“Hope you don’t mind,” Gloria said breezily. “My girls Sheyla and Synthia were already out for tea, and I thought — why not stop by? The more, the merrier.”

Synthia smiled. She wore pearls. Sheyla had sunglasses on her head, even indoors.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

“Ohhh, is this the adoption party?”

“Technically, it’s not an adoption party. Just a welcome. For the kids.”

I glanced at Amara, who immediately backed up. Liam gripped his toy car tighter.

Gloria handed over her usual perfect box of cookies and walked in like she owned the place. The “girls” followed, and their heels clicked against the wood floor.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

“Come meet Grandma’s friends,” Gloria called out.

The women bent slightly, inspecting Amara and Liam like rare artifacts.

“Oh my. They’re… not at all what I expected.”

“Well,” Sheyla laughed, “they’re definitely not Andrew’s.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

“I mean, just look at them,” Synthia added, sipping from her travel mug. “Can’t deny that.”

I moved toward the kids — shoulders stiff, arms tense. But Gloria got there first.

“You know,” she said, loud enough to fill the room, “when Hannah told Andrew she wanted to adopt, I assumed it was just another phase.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

The room went still.

“But then she went and pushed for two. Not even related! Different backgrounds, different everything. And Andrew — poor thing — always so easily… persuaded.”

“Gloria, that’s enough.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

“Oh, come now. I’m not saying anything that hasn’t been whispered already.”

Synthia shrugged. “We just think it’s… risky. All those trauma stories. And honestly, it’s different when they’re not your blood.”

“I mean,” Sheyla added, “you can love them all you want, but you don’t know what’s in there. Genes matter.”

“You need to leave.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

“Leave?” Gloria raised her eyebrows. “For saying the truth? For being realistic? These children…” she turned to them “… are my fake grandchildren. I’m not leaving them a dime. My son has been manipulated. And I won’t pretend otherwise.”

She turned to the hallway as if expecting Andrew to defend her. But he wasn’t there. He’d gone out ten minutes earlier to grab something from the store — one of the toys we forgot to wrap.

I was alone with them. Alone with their judgments, their perfectly chilled cruelty. Gloria narrowed her eyes.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

“So sensitive. Maybe if Hannah had her own children, she wouldn’t be so desperate to fake it.”

That one hit like a punch to the throat.

Just then, the front door creaked open. Andrew stepped inside, holding a small gift bag and a stunned expression. He caught the silence, the tension, the look on Amara’s face.

“What’s going on?”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

Gloria turned to him “Your wife just threw us out.”

Andrew looked at me. Then, at the kids. And for the first time, I saw something shift behind his eyes.

“I only heard the last few things you said, Mom. But I think they were enough to make one thing very clear — Hannah’s right. You need to leave. Now.”

No one spoke on the way out. The door shut. I turned. Amara had tears in her eyes but hadn’t let them fall.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

“I’m not like her,” I said. “Not even close.”

She came to me slowly. Then whispered, “I know.”

I thought that was the last time I’d hear from Gloria. I was wrong. Life has a funny way of bringing cold hearts back to warm hands, when they need them most.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

Weeks passed. Then months. And one day, we’d crossed an invisible line.

No more sidewalk screams. No more glassy stares or flinching at bedtime.

The house echoed with,

“Mom! Mom, look!”

“Mom, where’s my green marker?” or “Mom, Amara’s not sharing!”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

And every time, it felt like a tiny miracle. But it wasn’t magic.

It was therapy. Patience. Sleepless nights. It was Andrew making pancakes shaped like bears.

It was me, learning how to wait through a storm without needing an umbrella.

We didn’t fix them. We just stayed. And in staying, we became theirs.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

We didn’t hear from Gloria after the party. But we heard about her.

Andrew’s cousin mentioned it first, stirring her coffee with too much interest.

“You know… that whole scene at your place? Yeah. It got around. Judith told me people were still discussing it at the dentist’s office last week.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

I raised an eyebrow.

“She said Gloria tried to defend herself — said she was ‘just being honest.'”

Later, at the grocery store, Mrs. Calder from the PTA leaned toward me at the checkout line.

“I heard what happened. If it were my grandkids, I’d never let her near them again. Honestly, I don’t think she’s even welcome at Sunday socials anymore.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

Then Andrew’s friend Mark stopped by to borrow a ladder.

“You guys okay?” he asked, scratching the back of his neck. “I ran into your mom at the pharmacy. She looked like someone had cut off her oxygen supply. Barely made eye contact with anyone.”

Piece by piece, it all came together.

Gloria had been quietly removed from her church’s charity board.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

Her gardening club “took a break” and never reformed.

Even her old neighbor Mr. Graves — who once brought her tomatoes — now muttered,

“Can’t smile at a woman like that anymore. Not after what she said.”

She hadn’t just lost us. She’d lost her halo. And nobody wanted to be seen standing in her shadow.

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

On Christmas morning, we baked cinnamon rolls in our pajamas.

Liam wore his Spiderman slippers. Amara insisted on wrapping every gift herself — even the one for the dog. Andrew was making cocoa when the knock came. I opened the door, still in my robe.

There she was. Gloria. She held a single red envelope.

“I just… I needed to tell someone.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

A long pause.

“I don’t know if it was your idea…”

“It wasn’t. They chose it. They signed it. They even argued over which sticker to use.”

Gloria nodded slowly.

“I called them fake. And they were the only ones who remembered me.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

For illustration purposes only | Source: Midjourney

She tried to smile, but it fell apart halfway.

“I’m not asking for anything. I just thought… you should know.”

I opened the door a little wider.

“They’re decorating the tree. If you want to say thank you — say it to them.”

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

For illustration purposes only | Source: Pexels

She hesitated. Then, I stepped inside.

From the kitchen, Liam shouted, “Hey! The star’s crooked!”

Amara giggled. “I like it that way!”

I don’t know if she ever entirely changed. But I know that I could be proud of my kids.

The children Gloria once called fake taught her something real. About love. About family. And about second chances — even when you don’t deserve them.

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