My Father-in-Law Wanted to Marry Two Young Women at 68… But the Truth We Discovered Was Even More Heartbreaking

I never thought I’d face something so ironic in my life.

My father-in-law — now 68 years old, half of his hair already gray, his joints aching whenever the Tagaytay air turned cold — suddenly announced that he wanted to get married. Not just to one person… but to two young women.

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It all started after he went on a week-long “senior group tour” to Baguio with his retired buddies. He returned looking unusually refreshed — his hair neatly combed and glossy with pomade, his barong freshly ironed, and, occasionally, he’d even wear a dash of White Castle cologne.

The whole family was suspicious. But we didn’t say anything… until one dinner, when he casually put down his spoon, looked up from his sinigang, and announced:

“I’ve made a decision. Life is short. I want companionship. And… well… I’ve decided on two ladies.”

My husband choked on his rice. I dropped my spoon.
He went on to explain how he met two young women in Baguio—one 29, the other 31—working in the “premium wellness services” industry. He described them as “malambing, maalaga, and very understanding sa mga senior citizen.”

My husband immediately asked:

“Do they know your real age, Papa?”

He waved his hand nonchalantly.

“Of course! I told them I was 58. What’s ten years, anyway?”

I rubbed my temples. A few days later, he even brought one of the women to our house in Quezon City. She was polite, sweet-spoken, and kept calling him “Tatay Ji” — the “Ji” part she said with a tone that sounded both respectful… and flirty. When she left, we were horrified to learn he had given her Nanay Lourdes’s heirloom necklace — an antique piece passed down through generations.

That’s when we knew we had to intervene.


Operation: Mrs. Belinda from Next Door

We hatched a plan: to introduce him to Aling Belinda, our widowed neighbor known for her sharp tongue and even sharper instincts. She had no tolerance for young women chasing pension money.

The two went out once — a simple stroll around the village and a quick merienda at Jollibee. The very next day, he stopped mentioning the two Baguio girls altogether. But not before muttering under his breath:

“Grabe, ang mahal pala ng mga babae ngayon… Para kang nag-aalaga ng dalawang anak ulit. Better to stay single and healthy.”

We thought it was over.
We were wrong.


The Real Horror Was in the Drawer

Weeks later, while cleaning his room, I found a locked drawer slightly ajar. Curiosity got the best of me. Inside was a thick stack of invoices, receipts, and enrollment forms… all from a company called:

Golden Horizons Companionship Services Inc. — Serving Filipino Seniors with Heart.”

The documents detailed various “packages”:

24/7 Companion Package

Lifetime Soulmate Affection Package

Special Healing Touch Program for Senior Men

The rates? Astronomical.

Some services were billed per hour, some per emotional milestone (“First kiss encounter – P18,000”, “Intimate dinner talk – P12,500”), and some were marketed as “lifetime packages.”

My heart dropped.

The two women weren’t “maalaga” out of sincerity — they were employees. Actors. Professionals in emotional manipulation. And my father-in-law? He had signed up like he was buying a cable subscription.

His savings account had been drained significantly. And that heirloom necklace? It likely never made it to any jewelry box — probably converted into payment for the “Platinum Emotional Wellness Experience.”


The Painful Truth Was Not About Marriage

The tragedy wasn’t that he wanted to marry.
It was that he had been quietly exploited, professionally deceived by people who saw in him not a person—but a bank account tied to vulnerability and loneliness.

He never admitted it to us.
He just grew quieter again.
His once-cheerful humming stopped. The pomade and barong were put away.

He sat alone on the porch most afternoons, sipping salabat, watching the street in silence.

We stopped worrying about him “falling in love.”
We started worrying about what kind of traps society had now crafted — to prey on men like him.

He wasn’t foolish.
He was lonely.
And someone had sold him a fantasy — at a price that cost him both pride and peace.


Final Reflection

Since then, we’ve made sure he’s never alone too long. Not because we fear another strange engagement,
but because we know now how easy it is to be conned when all you want is connection.

The real horror wasn’t a ridiculous wedding.
The horror was how vulnerable love-starved elders are in a world that sells affection like a business.

And the saddest part?

He didn’t lose to love.
He lost to loneliness… professionally packaged.