I Never Planned to Become a Parent at 18
I’m 25 now, and I never planned on becoming a dad at 18 — especially not to twin newborns.
Back then, I was just a high school senior living in a rundown two-bedroom apartment with my mom, Lorraine. She had always been unpredictable — the kind of person who changed direction like the wind.
Some days she was sweet and nurturing. Other days, she acted like the whole world owed her something, and somehow I was the one paying the price for it.
Then one day, she came home pregnant.
And honestly, part of me thought maybe this would change her. Maybe having children would finally give her something steady to hold onto.
But instead, she became angrier.
Angry at the world. Angry at the man who left her. Angry that pregnancy didn’t magically turn her into the center of everyone’s attention.
She never told me who the father was.
I stopped asking after the second time she screamed at me to “mind my own business.”
I still remember one night vividly — the way she slammed the refrigerator door so hard it rattled the whole kitchen while muttering about how men always disappeared and left women to clean up the mess.
And then the twins were born.
Ava and Ellen.
I was there the day they came into the world.
For about two weeks, Lorraine pretended to be a mother.
That’s honestly the only way I can describe it.
She would change a diaper, then disappear for hours. She’d warm a bottle, collapse on the couch, and sleep through the babies crying.
I tried to help however I could, but I was just a teenager myself. I had no idea what I was doing.
I was sneaking homework in between night feedings and constantly wondering if any of this was normal.
Then one night, she vanished.
No note.
No phone call.
Nothing.
I woke up at 3 a.m. to a screaming baby and an empty apartment.
Her coat was gone.
Everything else — the mess, the smell of her perfume, the chaos she left behind — was still there.
I stood in the kitchen holding Ellen while Ava screamed from her bassinet, and I felt this cold panic settle deep into my bones.
“If I fail them, they die.”
It sounds dramatic now, but at the time it was the most honest thought I’d ever had.
There was no decision to make.
No moment where I chose responsibility.
It was simply there.
I dropped my plans to join a pre-med program — the same dream I’d carried since I was 11 years old after watching a documentary about heart transplants with my grandfather.