People kept asking if we were the nannies—until we started saying this one thing.
At first, it was just curious glances in grocery aisles. The kind of looks people give when they’re not sure what they’re looking at, but something doesn’t quite fit into their picture of the world. Then it became bold stares at playgrounds, the kind that linger a little too long. Once, a woman whispered it right behind us in line at the zoo.
“Are they, like, the nannies or something?”
My husband and I locked eyes. Kwame gave me that little smirk—half amused, half exhausted. We’d heard it before. A lot.
Three kids. All under six. All white, freckled, and radiating that bouncy, chaotic energy only kids possess. And us? A Black couple just trying to juggle juice boxes, potty breaks, and the never-ending cycle of laundry.
Adoption wasn’t the plan. We were going to travel, maybe settle down later, when our careers were where we wanted them. But life cracked us open in unexpected ways. After a friend of a friend introduced us to a social worker looking to place a sibling group—well, let’s just say we took one look at them and knew. These three weren’t waiting for us. We had been waiting for them.
People ask weird questions. All the time.
“Where are their real parents?”
“Do they know they’re adopted?”
“Isn’t it… confusing for them?”
Eventually, we learned to answer them the same way, gently, calmly, and over and over again.
“Families don’t have to match.”
Most of the time, that shut people up. You’d be surprised how a quiet truth said with confidence can disarm ignorance. But not always.
One Saturday, we were driving cross-country to visit my aunt in Tulsa. We’d been on the road for hours, and it was time for snacks, stretches, and potty breaks—the trifecta of traveling with little ones. We stopped in a tiny town in Missouri, the kind of place with one gas station, one diner, and probably one of everything else.
As I went inside the convenience store with our daughter Mae to pick up some juice and trail mix, Kwame stayed by the SUV with the boys. They were playing some version of tag that seemed to involve more shouting than rules, and I could see him trying to corral their energy while keeping an eye on the fuel gauge.
I was at the counter, swiping my card, when I saw her. Mid-sixties, floral blouse, big sunglasses, and a look on her face like she’d just discovered she’d been living next to aliens. She was staring out the window at Kwame and the boys.
Something in my gut dropped.
She stormed past me without a word, straight to the clerk. “Call the police. Now. I think those children are being abducted.”
I froze.
The clerk, a teenager who looked like he’d rather be anywhere else, hesitated. “Uh… are you sure, ma’am?”
“I saw them!” she hissed. “He’s yelling at them, they’re scared, they don’t look like him—just call!”
I ran outside, heart pounding. “Kwame!” I yelled. “Get the kids in the car. Now.”
But it was too late. A police cruiser screeched into the lot. Then another. Lights flashing. Doors flung open. Guns drawn.
I wish I could forget what that moment felt like, seeing my husband with his hands up, standing perfectly still while our sons clung to his legs, crying.
“Step away from the children! On the ground, now!”
“No!” Mae screamed from beside me. “That’s our daddy! That’s my daddy!”
I stepped forward, trying to keep my voice steady. “Officer, please, I’m their mother. We adopted them. We have papers, photos—I can show you—”
“Ma’am, step back. Hands where I can see them.”
The kids were screaming now. Ezra, our middle child, broke free from Kwame’s leg and ran to the officer, pounding his little fists on the man’s thigh. “Stop yelling at my daddy! He’s my daddy!”
The look on the cop’s face shifted. Just for a second. Enough that he lowered the gun. Then the other one did too.
Kwame was shaking. Still on his knees, arms out. “Please,” he said. “Please, don’t do this in front of my kids.”
Everything happened fast after that. ID checks. Our adoption papers shown on my phone. Photos from birthdays and family holidays. Videos of the kids learning to ride bikes with Kwame pushing behind them.
Eventually, it sunk in. The officers apologized—sort of. One muttered something about “protocol” while the other offered the kids a sticker, which they all refused.
The woman? The one who started it?
She stood off to the side, arms crossed, watching it all unfold with a pinched mouth. No apology. Not even a flicker of regret.
But the people who had gathered—the waitress from the diner, the guy from the auto shop, even the teenager from the store—they weren’t silent.
“That’s messed up,” someone said loudly. “You should be ashamed.”
“Called the cops on a father with his own kids. Disgusting.”
“She traumatized those kids, not him.”
Eventually, the police left. We sat in the SUV, all five of us, shaken and silent. Mae crawled into my lap and whispered, “Are we still a family?”
I wrapped my arms around her. “Of course we are, baby. Always.”
That night, in the motel room, I found Kwame standing by the window, staring out at the dark parking lot.
“She didn’t see a father,” he said. “She saw a threat. Because of how I look.”
I joined him at the window. “And the kids—they didn’t see cops. They saw danger. Because of what just happened.”
We didn’t sleep much that night. But the next morning, something had shifted. At breakfast, Ezra stood on his chair and declared to the waitress, “This is my family, and we don’t have to match!”
Everyone in the diner turned and looked.
Kwame and I locked eyes again. He gave me that smirk. This time, it was all pride.
People still ask questions. Still stare. But now, sometimes, people also come up to us with warmth.
“You’ve got a beautiful family.”
“Love how you talk about adoption.”
Or just—“Thanks for being out here. People need to see this.”
And that’s why I’m sharing this. Because families don’t have to match. And because the way we love our kids—loudly, visibly, proudly—shouldn’t be mistaken for anything but love.
So tell me—have you ever been mistaken for something you’re not, just because you didn’t look like someone expected?
Share if this made you feel something. Like it if you believe love doesn’t come in one color.