My father-in-law had no pension. I cared for him with all my heart for 12 years. With his last breath, he handed me a torn pillow.
When I opened it, I couldn’t hold back my tears.
My name is Althea. I became a daughter-in-law at 26, stepping into a family that had endured more hardships than anyone deserved. My mother-in-law had died young, leaving my father-in-law Bill to raise four children on his own.
He spent his entire life tending crops in a small town, never once having a job that came with a pension or any form of security.
By the time I joined the family, most of his children already had their own homes and rarely made time to visit. His remaining years depended almost entirely on my husband and me.
I often heard neighbors whisper behind my back: “Can you imagine? She’s only the daughter-in-law, yet she’s acting like his full-time caretaker.
Who even does that for a father-in-law?”
But I saw it differently. Here was a man who had sacrificed everything for his children. If I turned my back on him, who would stay by his side?
Those twelve years were far from easy.
I was young, exhausted, overwhelmed, and often lonely. When my husband left to work in Manila, I was left alone to care for our little boy and Bill, whose body was growing weaker by the day. I cooked, cleaned, washed clothes, and spent countless nights sitting on a plastic chair beside his bed, monitoring his breathing.
Once, during an especially difficult night, I finally broke and whispered: “Bill, I’m just your daughter-in-law.
Sometimes it feels too heavy for me.”
He didn’t lecture me or cry. Instead, he gave me a soft smile, took my trembling hand, and said: “I know. That’s why I’m grateful.
If it weren’t for you, I wouldn’t still be here.”
I never forgot those words. From that moment on, I promised myself I would make his remaining years as peaceful as I could. I bought him thick blankets when it grew cold.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇
