When I divorced my cheating husband, my world shattered — not because of losing him, but because I also lost my daughter. She was angry, confused, and too young to understand the pain I carried. He filled her head with lies, and slowly, she stopped answering my calls, stopped visiting, stopped calling me “Mom.”
Years passed. I watched her grow up through photos others shared, while I sat through holidays in silence. Then one day, she appeared at my door — not for reconciliation, but to ask for help paying her college tuition.
At first, my heart turned cold. How could she come to me now, after shutting me out for so long? But as I looked at her — older, uncertain, and a little broken — I saw not betrayal, but a lost child trying to find her way back.
So I didn’t answer with anger. I said, “Sit down. Let’s talk.” Not because she deserved it, but because forgiveness isn’t about who’s right — it’s about who refuses to keep the pain alive.
Sometimes life circles back in ways that test the size of your heart. You don’t have to forget the past. But if love once existed, there’s always a chance to rebuild — slowly, quietly, and one conversation at a time.