When Stacy became pregnant she was only a teenager. Still a child herself at just 15 years old when she gave birth to her son, she decided to place him for adoption. After she gave birth, he was taken away, never to be seen again or so she thought. Few years ago, a new law was passed that allowed adoptees to access their original birth certificate. This was welcome news for Stephen, an adoptee.
When he learned of the new law he knew he wanted his information. Within a month he had his birth certificate in hand and on it included details that were previously lost. “It was a big sigh of relief,” he told Inside Edition after he learned his biological mother’s name. Stephen searched Facebook for the name, Stacy. He was able to find her or at least someone he thought was her. “I sent her a message and said, ‘Hey, I have a really weird question,’” he said. “I said, ‘Did you put a baby boy up for adoption in 1982?’ She said, ‘Yes.’ I said, ‘I think you may be my biological mom.’”
It turned out that that the woman, who had attempted to find her son but was unsuccessful, and Stephen had a lot things in common, even though they had not seen or spoken to each other in 35 years. Although Stacy lived in a different state, she planned on running in the Half Marathon as a member of Team Red, White and Blue, an organization which Stephen was also a member of where he lived. Stephen was also set to participate in the same race.
On race day, Stephen devised a plan that was well worth the wait. As members of Team RWB gathered before the race someone handed Stacy a card. The card read, “It’s been 13,075 days since you last saw me. I didn’t want you wait one more day.” Her mouth dropped. “We must have hugged about 10 different times,” Stephen said. “We get done hugging, look at each other and then hug again. It just felt really surreal that it was finally happening because it happened so fast.” The mother and son duo completed the marathon as a team, presumably catching up on all the time they’ve both missed out on.