Có thể là hình ảnh về 6 người và đám cưới

Construction worker spends ₱729,000 pesos to marry paralyzed girl, on the wedding night, he took off his wife’s shirt and found out he won the lottery…

Construction worker spends ₱729,000 pesos to marry paralyzed girl, on the wedding night, he took off his wife’s shirt and found out he won the lottery…

In a small alley in the Philippines, Hung, a nearly 35-year-old construction worker, known for his gentleness and diligence, surprised the whole neighborhood when he announced that he would marry Lan. Lan, who was once the beauty queen of the teacher training college, had a traffic accident three years ago that left her completely paralyzed in the lower body, forcing her to use a wheelchair, losing her dream of standing on the podium.

People whispered: “Is Hung crazy? Marrying someone in a wheelchair and still spending three hundred million to organize the wedding?” Some people sympathized, others laughed. Hung did not explain. He just smiled gently, held Lan’s hand tightly when they took wedding photos, and said to her:
“If you can’t stand up, I will sit next to you. We will continue the rest of our lives together.”

Lan cried like rain in his arms. All her feelings of guilt, resentment, and fear disappeared. For the first time in three years of lying in a hospital bed, she believed she could be happy.

Lan’s family initially strongly objected. Her mother cried and scolded her:
“You’re already like this, why don’t you think? Why do you let others suffer with you?”

Lan just looked at her mother, smiling weakly but firmly:
“I don’t want to be a burden. But Hung doesn’t consider me a burden. I trust him.”

After a few months of perseverance, both families finally relented. The wedding was simple but cozy. Hung rebuilt the small house himself, built a ramp, and adjusted everything so that Lan could live independently to some extent. He also installed a railing and redesigned the bathroom. People calculated roughly that he spent more than 300 million – the money he had saved for 10 years working everywhere – just to make her life a little easier.

On the wedding night, it was drizzling. In the small room that smelled of new wood, Hung helped Lan to bed. He clumsily removed the white lace wedding dress. His hands were shaking – not because of lust, but because of emotion. When the dress fell, he stopped.

Not because of her weak body. But because of the scars, the faint lines running down her back and sides. The traces of three years of painful physical therapy, of silent falls, and of crying in the middle of the night because she couldn’t turn over.

Hung bent down and hugged her tightly. Not a word was spoken, but his tears soaked her hair.

“Don’t you regret it?” Lan asked softly, her voice faltering.

Hung shook his head, his lips lightly touching her forehead:
“No. I only regret… not coming sooner, to spare you some of the pain. You are the greatest luck of my life.”

Lan burst into tears. She had never felt herself looked at with such eyes – not pity, not burden, but pure love.

From that day on, every day was a new day. Hung was not only her husband, but also her companion on her journey to recovery. He took her to physical therapy every week, taught her how to cook her favorite dishes, made her own clothes hangers, and installed a small phone system next to her bed so she could call him if needed.

As for Lan, although still in a wheelchair, her eyes were brighter than any other woman’s. She started painting again – paintings full of life, full of light. She also opened an online art class for children, called:  “Reviving from Colors.”

A year later, she began to feel her legs. Two years later, with extraordinary effort and love by her side, Lan learned to walk with crutches. The day she took her first three steps, Hung hugged her and cried like a child.

“See?” she laughed through her tears. “You really hit the jackpot.”

He nodded, whispering,
“And I wouldn’t trade it for any other prize, not even the whole world.”