I Volunteered at a Food Bank — And I Saw My Ex’s Mom in Line
I started volunteering at the food bank just to get out of the house.
After the divorce, I needed any reason to keep going.
I never imagined it would become a weekly routine.
But there was something healing about handing out food and receiving quiet smiles in return.
It lightened me. It helped me heal.
Until that Thursday came.
It was raining hard.
I was under the tarp, handing out the last bags of groceries.
A white car pulled up, its windows streaked with rain.
A woman stepped out, wearing a floral coat—instantly familiar.
I froze.
It was Marlene.
Dariel’s mother. My ex’s mom.
It had been three years since I last saw her.
She was the one who once told me I was “too emotional” for her son.
We didn’t part on good terms.
And now, here she was—head bowed, thin, and visibly worn down.
She didn’t recognize me at first.
I handed her a grocery bag, like I did with everyone else.
Then our eyes met.
Something flickered in her expression.
Like she wanted to say something.
I asked gently, “Are you okay?”
She didn’t respond.
She just gripped the bag tightly and whispered:
“It’s your fault I’m here.”
I gasped.
My eyes widened.
My hands trembled on the remaining grocery bags.
She didn’t look back.
She walked away quietly.
I stood there under the rain, surrounded by wet ground and questions.
Marcie, a fellow volunteer, walked up and asked if I was okay.
I nodded and stepped aside to catch my breath.
Over and over in my head:
“My fault?”
That night, I went home with soggy shoes.
The kettle boiled for tea.
But her words stayed with me.
Dariel and I had been together for a long time — five years.
Engaged for one.
But we weren’t a match.
He was quiet. I was emotional.
His mom never liked me.
She always said I was “too intense” and that her son didn’t need “that kind of drama.”
When we broke up, she seemed relieved.
She even messaged me:
“This is for the best.”
I never replied. I blocked her.
And now, she’s the one in line at the food bank.
And I’m the one being blamed?
Week after week, I kept seeing her return.
She avoided me.
But I always greeted her with a smile—just like everyone else.
Still, I couldn’t shake it.
One day I asked Marcie:
“The woman in the floral coat?”
“Marlene?” she replied. “Yeah. She’s been coming for about six months now. Lost her home. Her son left. I heard she’s staying in an extended-stay motel near the old Kmart.”
I swallowed hard.
“Do you know what happened?”
“No idea. Probably one of those sad stories.”
That Sunday, I passed by the motel.
It was old. A few broken lights.
Her car wasn’t there. I left.
But I couldn’t stop thinking about her.
Two weeks later, she didn’t show up. I started to worry.
Marcie said she hadn’t seen her in a while.
That night, I stared at my phone.
I typed a message to Dariel.
We hadn’t spoken in years, but I still had his number.
“Hi. I saw your mom at the food bank. She doesn’t seem okay.
Thought you should know.”
Hours passed.
He finally replied:
“I know.”
That was it. Two words.
I wanted to scream.
How could he turn his back on her like that?
But I didn’t know if it was even my place to intervene.
The next Thursday, Marlene returned.
I gathered my courage and asked:
“Do you need anything else—blankets, clothes, anything at all?”
She looked at me, tired eyes meeting mine.
“What I need… is for my son to stop hating me,” she whispered.
“But that’s not something you can pack in a bag, is it?”
I had no answer.
So I said the truth:
“I don’t know what happened between you.
But I know Dariel isn’t okay either.
It’s like… he’s numb now.”
She gave a faint, sad smile.
“Do you know why I blamed you?” she asked as she placed the grocery bag down.
“Because when you left, my son started falling apart.
He didn’t show it.
But… he stopped feeling. Even toward me.”
“That wasn’t my fault,” I replied quietly.
She nodded.
“I know.
But you were the last good thing in his life.
When you left, it was like he died too.”
I looked at her.
She wasn’t the arrogant woman I once feared.
She was a mother in pain, holding on to the only person left who might still care.
I don’t know what came over me, but I asked:
“Do you want me to talk to him?”
She was stunned.
“You’d do that?”
“I can’t promise anything.
But maybe… if someone else says it, he’ll listen.”
That night, I called Dariel. He didn’t answer.
So I left a voicemail:
“Hey. It’s me.
Your mom… she’s not doing well.
I don’t know everything, but she still loves you.
I just hope you’ll listen.
That’s all I ask.”
He never called back.
But the next Thursday — Marlene wasn’t alone.
Her car was there.
She stepped out… and so did Dariel.
They lined up together.
When they reached the front, he looked at me. Steady. Calm.
“Thank you,” he said. “For everything.”
Marlene smiled—a smile I hadn’t seen in years.
They left side by side. Quiet, but no longer broken.
Weeks later, a letter arrived.
No return address.
“You were right. I needed to listen.
We’re not okay yet, but we’re trying.
Thank you. – D”
Tucked inside the envelope was a dried flower from her floral coat.
I sat quietly on my sofa.
No tears. No words.
Sometimes, life brings you back to a person — not to reopen old wounds,
but to finally help them heal.
I volunteered just to forget.
But in the end…
I helped repair a bond.
And maybe—I found a part of myself I thought I’d lost too.
Because sometimes, life really does come full circle…
in the most unexpected ways.
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