I wrote my son daily from a nursing home but got no response until a stranger took me home.

After my son convinced me to reside in a nursing home, I wrote him everyday about missing him. He never responded until a stranger explained why and took me home. Osteoporosis made it hard for me to move about at 81.

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My son Tyler and his wife Macy moved me to a nursing home since my health made care difficult. Tyler said, “We can’t be tending to you the entire day, mom.” “We must work. We’re not caregivers.”

Since I attempted to remain out of their way to avoid disrupting their schedules, I puzzled why he now felt that way about me.

When I needed to walk about the home, I used my walker from my room. I pledge to keep out of your way. Don’t put me in a nursing home.

Your father constructed this house for me, and I want to live here forever, I begged. Tyler dismissed me, claiming my late husband James’ house was “too big for me.”

“Come on, mom,” he said. Leave the house to Macy and me!

All this space can hold a gym and offices. Lots much room to renovate.”

I realized that he moved me to a nursing facility to take my house, not to care for me. I was devastated, struggling to stop crying when I realized Tyler had become selfish.

Where did I go wrong? I wondered when I entered my room that night. I believed I raised a polite man, but I was incorrect.

I never anticipated my son to betray me. Tyler and Macy brought me to a local nursing home where the staff would care for me 24/7 without much of a choice. “Don’t worry, mom, we’ll visit as much as we can,” Tyler said.

Hearing this, I understood that moving to a nursing home could be okay since they’d visit me regardless. I had no idea Tyler was lying to get me off his back. Every nursing home day felt like an eternity.

The staff and other patients were pleasant, but I wanted to be with family instead of strangers. I emailed Tyler every day without a phone or iPad, asking him to visit or how he was. I never heard back or was visited.

I gave up on visitors after two years in the nursing home. “Please, take me home,” I prayed every night, but after two years, I attempted to put my hopes down. However, my nurse startled me by telling me a 40-year-old man was at the counter looking for me.

“Did my son finally visit?” Before going to the front, I grabbed my walker fast. When I arrived, I smiled expecting Tyler, but it was another man I hadn’t seen in months. His call “Mom!” was accompanied by a firm hug.

“Ron? Are you Ron? Asked him.

Mom, it’s me. How are you? Sorry I didn’t visit you sooner.

After returning from Europe, I went straight to your place, he said. “My home? Did you see Tyler and Macy?

I haven’t seen them since they put me in a nursing home two years ago,” I said. Ron looked at me unhappy and requested me to sit. He told me about the past two years in the nursing home while we sat on the couch.

I’m sorry to tell you this, mom. “I thought you already knew,” he began. Tyler and Macy perished in a house fire last year.

I discovered it when I noticed your house abandoned. I checked the mailbox for your location and found all your unread letters, he said. Ron’s claims were unbelievable.

Though I resented my son for what he done to me, hearing about his death devastated my heart. I cried all day for him and my daughter-in-law Macy. Ron stayed by my side while I cried.

He comforted me without speaking until I was ready. A boy named Ron lived with me. Tyler and he were inseparable as children.

After his parents died, Ron was raised by his grandmother in poverty, unlike Tyler, who had everything. I fed, dressed, and housed him like my kid until he went to college in Europe. Ron never returned to the US after acquiring a high-paying job in Europe, and we lost touch.

Before dad arrived at the nursing home, I never imagined I’d see him again. “Mom,” he said after I calmed down. I don’t think you belong in this nursing home.

Will you let me take you home? “I would love to care for you,” he said. I cried again.

My son kicked me out of my house, and a man wanted to take me in despite not being his blood relative. Really, would you do it for me? “Yes, mom.

No need to inquire. You made me who I am. Ron hugged me and whispered, “I’m nothing without you.”

Ron helped Jude pack and moved her into his new house that evening.

Jude learned he had a vast family, which greeted him enthusiastically. She died happy, surrounded by those who loved and cared for her.

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