I Sacrificed Everything for Him—But He Threw Me Away in Public

My name is Marissa. I’m 49, a single mother, and last month I accepted a janitor position at my son Logan’s university. For nearly two decades, I’ve worked two—sometimes three—jobs at a time just to keep our little life from collapsing. Every tuition payment, every textbook, every late-night grocery run… I earned with tired hands and quiet determination.

So when a custodial position opened on his campus—steady hours, reliable pay, health benefits—it felt like a blessing. The first real stability I’d had in years.

But Logan didn’t see it that way.

When I told him, expecting something—support, a smile, anything—he recoiled like I’d confessed something shameful.

“YOU got a job here? As a janitor? Mom… that’s embarrassing. What if my friends see you?”

He said it like I was a stain he didn’t want anyone to notice.

I felt something inside me crumble. I tried to laugh it off, even joked, “If it bothers you that much, just pretend you don’t know me.”

But he didn’t laugh. He didn’t even flinch. He just shook his head and walked away.

The next morning, I went to work with a knot in my stomach. I was assigned to clean one of the main academic buildings—the busy kind, where students brush past you without a glance. I was wiping down a row of glass doors when I heard footsteps I knew instantly: Logan’s. Followed by the voices of his friends.

I braced myself for silence. Being ignored by my own son would’ve hurt… but what he did hurt far worse.

He looked me dead in the eyes, then turned to his friends and said loudly:

“Ugh, the cleaning crew always leaves streaks. Don’t touch anything, guys—you never know what they drag in.”

He said it while staring at me. Not like a son looking at his mother—but like someone looking at something beneath him.

His friends laughed. One even grimaced.

My hands trembled. I kept wiping the same spot over and over because if I stopped, I knew I would break. That moment—standing there with a dirty rag while my only child mocked me—might be the loneliest I’ve ever felt.

That evening, I confronted him.

“Why would you talk about me like that?”

He shrugged as if I were exaggerating.

“I told you not to work here. You didn’t listen. Don’t make this my fault.”

No apology. No remorse. Just dismissal.

I went to bed that night staring at the ceiling, wondering how the boy I raised with every ounce of love I had could so easily cast me aside to impress a few classmates.

I’m torn. I need this job. I need the income. But the humiliation… the sting of his words… they sit on my chest like weight.

Should I quit the job I worked so hard to get?
Should I force him to face what he did?
Or should I step back and let him live with the echo of his cruelty until he’s mature enough to hear it?

I keep asking myself the same question:

Am I overreacting—or did I finally see who my son has become?

Note: This story is a work of fiction inspired by real events. Names, characters, and details have been altered. Any resemblance to actual persons or situations is purely coincidental. Images are used for illustration only.

 

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