My name is Ana, 25 years old, and I married Carlos right after graduating from university. We met at university; our love was pure and simple. Carlos is kind and hardworking, but his mother, Doña Teresa, is famous in the neighborhood for being strict and cruel.
The very day he took me to meet her, she uttered a phrase:
“A girl from a poor village, will she be able to support this family?”
I tried to smile, thinking that if I was obedient and hardworking, someday she would accept me. But I was wrong. From the first day as a daughter-in-law, she criticized everything I did and never praised me.
The reason Doña Teresa didn’t accept me was simple: she had planned for Carlos to marry a rich girl from the region, and I had ruined her “plans.”
When there were guests, she would often say between the lines:
“These days, when you get married, you have to choose someone with money; what can you do with someone who has nothing?”
Carlos listened, but he rarely dared to defend me; he would just remain silent or change the subject. I swallowed my tears and told myself I had to endure everything for him.
One day, Carlos had to go on a business trip for a week. I stayed home looking after the family store and doing housework. That day, I accidentally dropped a bottle of oil, and it spilled on the floor. When Doña Teresa saw it, she flew into a rage and yelled at me, calling me clumsy and saying I had ruined everything.
But she didn’t stop there. Suddenly, she dragged me into a room, closed the door, and with a pair of scissors, cut off all my long hair, which I had cared for since I was a child.
I was in shock, struggling:
“Mom! Please, no… my hair…”
She gritted her teeth:
“What’s the point of so much hair? To attract other men? I’m cutting it all off so you know what humiliation is!”
The sound of scissors cutting my hair echoed throughout the house. Tears choked me, but she didn’t stop.
After cutting it, she forced me to take a small bag with my belongings:
“From now on, you’re going to the convent. I don’t want a shameless woman in my house!”
I fell to my knees, pleading:
“Mama, please… I didn’t do anything wrong…”
But she turned and left, leaving me trembling in the yard. I grabbed my bag and left through the door of Carlos’s house, while the neighbors murmured and stared at me.
It began to rain lightly, and the cold seeped into my bones. I didn’t know where to go; I only remembered what she had said: “to the convent.” So I walked to a small convent at the edge of town.
The nun in charge looked at me with compassion and allowed me to stay in the kitchen. With my hair disheveled and my eyes swollen from crying, I became the talk of the town.
During my time at the convent, I helped the nun clean, cook, and grow vegetables. No one scolded or criticized me; only the sound of the bell and the scent of incense offered me comfort.
The nun advised me:
“Don’t hold grudges. Resentment will only make you suffer more. Live well, and time will answer everyone.”
I listened and began to calm down. I enrolled in a sewing course in town; I studied in the mornings and worked at the convent in the afternoons.
Three months later, I was already making beautiful clothes, which I sold to the tourists who visited the convent. Little by little, I opened a small shop at the entrance to the convent and earned a steady income.
Carlos still came to see me secretly sometimes. He cried and begged me to come home, but I just shook my head:
“I won’t come back until your mother understands.”
He lowered his head, powerless.
One rainy afternoon, Doña Teresa appeared in front of the convent entrance. She was thinner, and her hair was grayer. When she saw me, she knelt down, tears in her eyes:
“Ana… forgive me… I was wrong…”
I remained silent. She told me that after I left, Carlos moved to an apartment and refused to speak to her. The shop was empty, and only then did she understand the value of the days when I had taken care of everything.
“Come home… I promise I’ll never treat you the way I did again.”
I was silent for a long moment and then replied calmly:
“Mom, I’m not angry anymore. But now I have my own life here. If I go back, everything will be the same as before.”
She wept and held my hands tightly:
“If you forgive me, I already feel relief…”
I nodded slightly. I forgive, but I’m not going back. I chose to stay at the convent, continue sewing, and offer vocational classes for the young people of the village.
My story surprised many. From being a humiliated daughter-in-law, thrown out of my home, I managed to get back on my feet and build a new life.
I learned that, sometimes, leaving is the most profound lesson for those who have hurt us. And forgiving doesn’t mean forgetting, but rather letting go and finding peace in your heart.