My name is Ramón, I’m 35, and I divorced my wife Clarisse exactly five months ago. Our marriage lasted six years, but it broke down from small conflicts that piled up until they created an irreparable distance. The day I walked out of the courthouse in Quezón City I felt relieved, thinking I had escaped that suffocating life.

Just a few weeks later I met Marites, a girl seven years younger than me, pretty and with a gift for speaking. Her presence made me feel reborn, like I was reliving my youth. And then, on an impulse, I had the idea of taking Marites to meet Clarisse — to show her that I had a new, happier life.

That day it was cold, late autumn. I dressed smartly and drove Marites to the old house in Makati where Clarisse lived. Marites, a little shy, whispered:
“Are you sure, Ramon? This is awkward.”

I scoffed:
“Awkward? I just want to show her that losing me is losing the world.”

We stopped the car in front of the door. My heart was pounding, not from excitement but from growing joy. I rang the bell. From inside the house came familiar footsteps. The door opened… and in that moment I froze.

It wasn’t Clarisse alone who opened the door. Beside her was a little girl of about four, clinging to her mother’s skirt, her big round eyes looking at me in confusion. But what felt like a punch to the chest was… behind them, a tall man, simply dressed but with a warm look, who casually placed his hand on Clarisse’s shoulder as if they had been together for a long time.

“What’s wrong with you?” Clarisse asked in a calm voice, without any confusion.

I stammered:
“What…?”

The man stepped forward and extended his hand:
“I’m Miguel, Clarisse’s fiancé. And this child is my son, but now she also calls Clarisse ‘mama.’”

My face burned. The word “fiancé” felt like a knife driven into my pride. I tried to force a smile, but my throat tightened and I couldn’t form a word.

Marites stood beside me, stunned as well. She gently tugged my hand to indicate I should turn around, but I remained rooted to the spot. I couldn’t believe it: the woman I had thought weak, who would suffer after the divorce, now looked so radiant and serene.

Clarisse continued, her voice soft but clear:
“Ramón, I don’t know how you feel now. Maybe you feel good, and if so, that’s fine.”

With that she turned to hug the little girl, smiling warmly at Miguel. In that moment I realized she had completely moved on from the past, while I was still trapped by my ego and complacency.

I turned away, clenching my fists, and an indescribable feeling filled my heart: it wasn’t jealousy but emptiness. On the drive back, Marites was silent, and all I could hear were the heavy beats of my own heart.

That night I tossed and turned in bed. I kept replaying Clarisse’s serene look and her smile with Miguel in my mind. I understood one thing: happiness is not about “provoking” someone — it’s about appreciating and preserving it while we can. And I had lost it forever.