I Adopted Deaf Twin Girls Left Out in the Cold—12 Years Later, One Phone Call Brought Me to Tears!!

Twelve years ago, during an early morning trash route, I spotted a stroller abandoned on a freezing sidewalk. Inside were two baby girls, no older than six months, wrapped in thin blankets and shivering in the cold.

I called 911 immediately and stayed with them until police and child services arrived. There was no note, no information — just two helpless babies left alone.

That night, I couldn’t stop thinking about them. My husband Steven saw how deeply it affected me and quietly asked, “What if we tried to foster them?”

The process was overwhelming, and then we learned something else: the twins were profoundly deaf. Many families had already backed out after hearing that. But neither of us hesitated. “We’ll learn, adapt, and love them,” I said.

Soon, Hannah and Diana became part of our family.

The first years were exhausting but beautiful. Steven and I took ASL classes, practiced sign language every night, worked extra hours, and struggled financially to give them the support they needed. But every small moment — their smiles, their first signs for “Mom” and “Dad” — made it worth it.

As they grew older, Hannah developed a love for fashion and art, while Diana became fascinated with engineering and design. At twelve, they teamed up for a school contest to create adaptive clothing for kids with disabilities.

Their ideas were incredible: clothes designed for comfort, hearing aids, and accessibility. Weeks later, a company called BrightSteps contacted us with life-changing news — they wanted to turn the girls’ designs into a real adaptive clothing line, with projected royalties of over $500,000.

When I told Hannah and Diana, they were overwhelmed with joy. Through tears, they signed, “Thank you for taking us. Thank you for learning our language.”

I held them close and signed back, “I found you on a freezing sidewalk, and I promised I’d never leave you. You are my daughters.”

Those tiny abandoned babies grew into strong, creative, inspiring young women. And while I may have saved them that morning, the truth is they saved me too.

They were never too much.

They were everything.!

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