Five years ago, I never imagined my life would change forever one cold, stormy night at the fire station. I was halfway through my shift, sipping on some lukewarm coffee, when a faint cry broke through the eerie silence outside. My partner Joe and I stepped outside and found a tiny newborn wrapped in a thin blanket, left alone at our doorstep.
The baby was no older than a few days, shivering from the cold, crying weakly. My heart clenched in that instant. We called Child Protective Services, but even then, I couldn’t stop thinking about him. When no one came to claim him, I knew what I had to do. I started the long, grueling adoption process—facing doubts from social workers about my ability to raise a child as a single firefighter.
The paperwork, the inspections, the sleepless nights of worry—it was exhausting, but Joe was my rock through it all.Finally, months later, Leo became my son. Life with Leo was an adventure. He had mismatched socks and dinosaur opinions, and mornings were filled with spilled cereal and laughter.
Every night, we’d build imaginary worlds, arguing whether a T. rex could chase a jeep or if pterodactyls really ate fish. I learned what it meant to be a parent—balancing the unpredictable demands of firefighting with bedtime stories and soccer practice.