My Wife Has ₱50,000 in Maternity Savings She Doesn’t Touch — I Told Her to Give It to My Sister When She Gives Birth, But She Refused. Then She Threw Something on the Floor That Made Me Go Cold…

I have a younger sister, Rosa, who got married just over a year ago and is now about to give birth to her first child. Her husband’s family is not well-off, and they still haven’t finished paying off their wedding debts. So when I heard Rosa was about to give birth, I immediately thought of helping her.

But I’m just a salaried employee, barely making ends meet. In my head, only one amount came to mind: my wife’s ₱50,000. That money came from her late mother, placed under her name, and she’s been keeping it as her “emergency fund.”

Every time I mentioned it before, she would brush it off:

“That money is for our future baby. Don’t touch it!”

But this time, I told myself, this is different. This is my own sister — my blood.

I spoke to my wife, Liza, at first gently, then more firmly, and finally, with a hint of anger:

“Can you not be so selfish? She’s my sister! She’s about to give birth, she doesn’t even have a proper breast pump. Don’t you feel sorry for her?”

Liza looked at me coldly:

“You talk as if I’m a stranger. But think back — since we got married, have you ever asked me what I need?”

I snapped:

“Is this the time to talk about petty things? Giving ₱50,000 doesn’t mean we lose everything. Your sister-in-law is also my sister!”

She fell silent, stood up, and walked into our bedroom. I stayed in the living room, muttering under my breath, feeling like I was finally seeing her “true colors.”

A few minutes later, Liza walked out — no words, just holding a small box. She stopped in front of me and threw it on the floor.

“You want ₱50,000, right? Here — take it yourself!”

I froze, startled. But when I looked down, it wasn’t money inside.

It was medical records.

I bent down, picked them up, and started reading. My hands shook.
— Infertility test results.
— Hormone test results.
— Abnormal uterine ultrasound.

Dates scribbled on the pages — all during times when she had quietly gone to the doctor alone, undergoing tests and treatments without telling me.

And then, the last page: An IVF (In Vitro Fertilization) cost estimate.

Total: nearly ₱80,000.

She stood there, eyes red, voice trembling but firm:

“That money… is my only hope to become a mother. I haven’t spent a single peso on myself. I’ve been preparing to go for IVF next month. And you call me selfish?”

I couldn’t answer. My throat closed up.

But she wasn’t done. Liza went to the closet and pulled out another set of documents:
— A resignation letter.
— A letter of refusal from her parents, who couldn’t help financially.
— And a savings passbook showing only ₱53,000 left.

“I have no one else but you. I’ve put all my hopes into this. But if I have to give everything away to your family… then just consider me unworthy to be your wife.”

She turned, walked back into the room, and slammed the door.

The house went dead silent.

I stared at the medical records scattered on the floor, hearing only the pounding of my own heart.

I — a husband — had called her selfish, without ever asking about the silent battles she’d been fighting. Without realizing that her deepest dream wasn’t gold or riches… it was simply to be a mother.

For the first time in my life, I found myself kneeling. Not to beg for money — but to beg for forgiveness.