The rain had been falling since dawn. Cold. Relentless. The kind that seeped into your bones, even through thick clothes and years of emotional armor.
I sat on the curb outside the house that used to be mine, cradling my newborn son against my chest, his tiny body wrapped in the thinnest lampin we had left dry. Around me were two duffel bags, stuffed with feeding bottles, diapers, a few clothes, and a manual breast pump. Nothing else.
Not a single apology. Not even a backward glance.
Carlo had slammed the door after saying what I thought I’d never hear:
“Sabi ng nanay ko, mali talaga ‘tong lahat. Lumayas ka na. Sinisira mo buhay ko.”
His mother, Aling Marites, had always hated me.
At first, it was quiet resentment—backhanded compliments during Sunday lunch, polite smiles that never reached her eyes. Then came the outright insults: that I “trapped” her only son, that I wasn’t good enough, that I didn’t know how to raise a baby or cook a decent sinigang.
When our baby came, I thought she would soften.
But she got worse.
Every cry from our son was blamed on me. Every sleepless night was my fault. And Carlo—he changed. He started listening to her more than me. Eventually, he stopped listening to me altogether.
And now I was here.
In the rain.
With nothing.
I had no family to turn to. My parents had both passed years ago, and my only sibling worked as a cashier in Davao, barely surviving on minimum wage. I tried calling her, but it went straight to voicemail.
I didn’t want to cry in front of my baby.
So I sang instead.
Softly, shakily—a lullaby my mother used to hum when I was small, a Tagalog tune about the moon and dreams. I don’t even know if the tune made sense. But my baby calmed, his tiny fingers gripping the collar of my soaked blouse like it was the only warmth he knew.
A tricycle rattled down the road. I tensed.
But it passed.
Of course.
Who would stop for a soaked, trembling woman and her infant on a random sidewalk in Quezon City?
And then—someone did.
A black Toyota Vios pulled up slowly. The window rolled down.
A woman in her fifties, with kind eyes and a voice like velvet.
“Anak, ayos ka lang ba?”
I blinked through the rain. I wanted to lie. To say I was fine. That this was just temporary.
But my lips trembled, and the truth spilled out.
“Pinalayas ako ng asawa ko. Wala akong matutuluyan.”
She opened the passenger door.
“Halika, pasok ka muna. Basa na ang anak mo.”
Her name was Tita Lourdes. A retired midwife. She took us to her small two-bedroom apartment in Barangay Kalayaan, just a few blocks away. Gave me towels, dry duster clothes, and held the baby while I showered. She didn’t ask for details. She didn’t judge.
She just listened.
When I finally sat on her sofa, hair damp, emotions barely contained, she placed a hot mug of salabat in my hands and whispered:
“Anak… kahit anong nangyari, hindi ito ang katapusan.”
I didn’t believe her. Not yet.
But that night, as I watched my baby sleep peacefully in a borrowed crib, I realized she had given me something no one else had:
A second chance.
Lourdes never asked for anything in return.
Not when she fed me tinola that first night, not when she offered me her pull-out bed, and not even when I stayed longer than I should’ve.
“Naranasan ko na ‘yan dati,” she said one morning, bottle-feeding my son so I could shower. “Hindi man pareho ang kwento, pero alam ko ang pakiramdam ng itapon at sabihing wala kang kwenta.”
I looked at her then—really looked. Behind the kindness was pain. Maybe old, but never forgotten.
“Paano mo nalampasan?” I asked.
She smiled.
“Dahil napagtanto ko, karapat-dapat ako sa mas maganda.”
Over the next few days, I started breathing again.
I contacted Bahay Pag-asa, a local women’s shelter that offered legal support. They helped me begin the process of applying for solo parent assistance and referred me to a pro bono family lawyer.
I didn’t want revenge.
I wanted safety.
And dignity.
For me. For my son.
Lourdes insisted I stay until I had somewhere stable. I offered to pay. She shook her head.
“Iponin mo na lang pang-gatas ng anak mo.”
And so I did.
Then, the unexpected happened.
Carlo called.
At first, I didn’t recognize the number. When I answered, his voice was tight.
“Di ko alam kung nasaan kayo. Ayos lang ba kayo?”
I laughed. Bitter. Exhausted.
“Wala kang pakialam nang isinara mo ‘yung pinto.”
He was quiet.
“Sabi ni Mama… nagwala ka raw. Na-stress ka lang. Di ko na alam anong paniniwalaan ko.”
I swallowed the lump in my throat.
“Panindigan mo ‘yung nakita mo,” I said. “Pinili mo siya kaysa sa amin ng anak mo.”
“Natakot lang ako,” he murmured. “Akala ko tama ang ginagawa ko—”
“Mas pinili mong sumunod kaysa lumaban,” I cut in. “Hiniling ko lang na ipaglaban mo ako. Pero tinago mo lang ako sa likod niya.”
He asked to meet. “Para mag-usap lang.”
I said no.
Not until I had legal protection.
He begged to see the baby.
“Hindi pa pwede.”
And I hung up.
I felt nothing but resolve.
Three weeks passed.
I found part-time work at a daycare in the barangay. It wasn’t much, but I got to stay close to my son. Lourdes watched over him during my shifts, and I swore I’d repay her.
“Naibalik mo na,” she told me one night. “Matagal nang tahimik itong bahay.”
Then one evening, I came home and saw a small envelope on the dining table. Lourdes wasn’t home yet.
The envelope had my name—handwritten.
Inside was a check.
₱56,000.
And a note:
“Para sa gatas, lampin, at kalayaan. Wala kang utang sa akin. Basta ipangako mong wag mong hayaang sirain ng iba ang halaga mo.”
No signature.
But I knew.
It was her.
I cried—harder than I had in weeks.
Six months later, I had a small studio unit in Cainta. It wasn’t grand, but it was ours. My baby had a crib. I had a kettle, a fan, and peace.
Carlo tried again. He sent flowers through a courier.
But I didn’t go back.
Not because I hated him.
But because I finally loved myself.
Lourdes and I stayed close. She became more than a savior. She became family.
And every time I see a woman with puffy eyes pushing a stroller, or a young mother staring blankly at the rain…
I remember that day.
The day my life ended…
And began again
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