My 25-year-old son married a young woman named Tina, and at first everything seemed full of promise. They had a baby soon after, and I believed they were building a strong life together. But slowly, Tina began hinting that my son was being unfaithful. I didn’t want to believe it at first, thinking she might be mistaken or emotional, but eventually she showed me proof. My shame was immediate and heavy, because that wasn’t the man I raised. I told her I supported her and that she deserved better, even if it meant leaving him.
Tina stayed anyway. She forgave him again and again, holding onto hope that things would change for the sake of their child. I couldn’t understand her choice, but I saw how deeply she still loved him despite everything. Then one day my son called calmly and said he was divorcing her. He had already found someone new and called it a “better match.” Tina was left alone with a baby, struggling in a small rented room, working constantly just to survive. Not long after, he called again to invite me to his wedding.
When I confronted him about Tina, he laughed it off like it was nothing. He said she was “good, but not enough,” and that he deserved someone better. Those words broke something in me. The arrogance, the lack of remorse, the complete disregard for the woman who had given him everything—it was unbearable. I hung up without another word. On the day of his wedding, my husband and I made a different choice. Instead of attending, we went straight to Tina’s place.
She opened the door holding her crying baby, exhausted and overwhelmed. Her small room felt heavy with silence and struggle. We stepped inside without hesitation. I helped clean, cooked what little I brought, and rocked the baby until he finally slept. Tina finally sat down and cried quietly while I stayed beside her. When my son called angrily asking where I was, I told him the truth—that I was with his ex-wife because she needed support more than he needed guests at his wedding. He ended the call furious and hasn’t spoken to us since. I still think about it often, but when I see Tina trying her best each day, I know I chose where I was needed most.