Two days before my wedding, I watched my fiancée shove a cleaning lady out of my own boutique. The problem? That woman was my mother.
But I didn’t confront my fiancée or cancel the wedding.
Instead, I waited until the perfect moment to teach her a lesson about respect. I owe everything I am to my mother.
She raised me alone, working two jobs without ever complaining. I don’t remember her ever sitting still unless she was too tired to stand.
We didn’t have much, but I never felt it.
If I needed something, she found a way. If I was struggling, she was there. And because of that, I learned something early: You can tell everything you need to know about a person by how they treat someone like her.
I studied business at community college, which is where I met my first wife, Hannah.
We combined her design skills and my business acumen, and started a bridal boutique. After she died, I kept the store going, and somehow I made it through.