My 5-Year-Old Wants to Invite ‘Her Real Dad’ to Our Father’s Day Dinner

Father’s Day was meant to be a special day where my family celebrated me, but when my daughter told me a secret that almost shattered my heart, I ended up discovering a truth that would force my hand.

You don’t know heartbreak until it appears wearing sneakers and holding a crayon drawing. At least that’s how it started for me, the end of my longtime marriage, all because of the utterances of a child.

My daughter Lily is five. She’s my world, sharp, funny, full of wonder!

The kind of kid who thinks the moon follows us home because it’s lonely and we make it feel safe. She’s the kind of child who’ll spend half an hour explaining how clouds are secretly marshmallows that escaped a picnic.

Lily makes me feel like a hero just by asking me to open the peanut butter jar. And I couldn’t be prouder to be her dad.

My wife, Jessica, and I had Lily soon after our wedding.

She was a surprise, one of those “you’re kidding me” moments that end in tears of joy. We hadn’t planned to become parents so soon, but we were ready. Or I thought we were.

We carved out a life in a small Midwestern town where people still wave from their porches.

I’m an electrician, 40, seasoned, not flashy, and Jess runs a photography studio out of our garage.

She used to shoot weddings and portraits, but since Lily was born, she’s been taking on fewer clients. Said she wanted more time at home. I admired that.

Unlike most dads, I’m present and hands-on.

So, last week, I picked Lily up from preschool. It was a normal day. She climbed into the back seat, smelling like finger paint and raisins.

As I pulled into our driveway, she leaned forward in her booster seat, holding a crayon, and said something that turned my blood to ice.

“Daddy, can we invite my real dad to Father’s Day dinner?”

My foot slipped on the brake! We jolted to a stop.

“Your… real dad?” I asked, trying to keep my voice calm, steady.

She nodded, her curls bouncing.

“Yeah!

He comes when you’re at work,” she revealed.

Struggling to process what she was saying and also dealing with denial, I turned back to look at her and replied, “Maybe you mixed something up, sweetie.”

“Uh uh,” she said, shaking her curls side to side. “He comes all the time and brings me nice things like chocolate, and we play tea party. Mommy makes dinner for him sometimes, and you know him.

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