When my son cheated on his wife, Tina, I felt something break inside me. She wasn’t just my daughter-in-law — she was family. She loved him, cared for their baby, and stood by his side through everything. But one day, he looked me in the eye and said, “Mom, she’s great, but I deserve someone better.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I raised him to respect people, to value loyalty, but somehow he forgot all of that. I told him plainly, “Son, one day you’ll regret walking away from the woman who would’ve done anything for you.” He just shrugged.
A few months later, he remarried. I went to the wedding — not out of pride, but because I hoped maybe he’d come to his senses. He looked happy, his new wife smiling beside him, and I tried to convince myself he’d finally settled down.
Then, only two weeks later, I got a call from Tina. She was shaken. “Your son’s new wife just showed up at my door,” she said. “She was crying.”
Apparently, the woman had discovered my son had been unfaithful — again. He’d been lying to her even before their wedding day. The new wife told Tina, “I should have listened when people warned me. Now I know what you went through.”
When I heard that, I didn’t feel proud — just sad. Sad that my son had to learn the hardest way that you can’t build happiness on someone else’s pain.
Life has a way of returning the lessons we refuse to learn. And that day, I realized karma doesn’t always come loudly — sometimes, it knocks softly… right at the door you once closed on someone who truly loved you.