What true love is:
"My
parents were married for 55 years. One morning, my mom was going
downstairs to make dad breakfast, she had a heart attack and fell. My
father picked her up as best he could and almost dragged her into the
truck. At full speed, without respecting traffic lights, he drove her to
the hospital.
When he arrived, unfortunately she was no longer with us.
During the funeral, my father did not speak; his gaze was lost. He hardly cried.
That
night, his children joined him. In an atmosphere of pain and nostalgia,
we remembered beautiful anecdotes and he asked my brother, a
theologian, to tell him where Mom would be at that moment. My brother
began to talk about life after death, and guesses as to how and where
she would be.
My father listened carefully. Suddenly he asked us to take him to the cemetery.
"Dad!" we replied, "it's 11 at night, we can't go to the cemetery right now!"
He raised his voice, and with a glazed look he said:
"Don't argue with me, please don't argue with the man who just lost his wife of 55 years."
There
was a moment of respectful silence, we didn't argue anymore. We went to
the cemetery, and we asked the night watchman for permission. With a
flashlight, we reached the tomb. My father caressed her, prayed, and
told his children, who watched the scene, moved:
"It was 55 years... you know? No one can talk about true love if they have no idea what it's like to share life with a woman."
He
paused and wiped his face. "She and I, we were together in that crisis.
I changed jobs ..." he continued. "We packed up when we sold the house
and moved out of town. We shared the joy of seeing our children finish
their careers, we mourned the departure of loved ones side by side, we
prayed together in the waiting room of some hospitals, we support each
other in pain, we hug each Christmas, and we forgive our mistakes...
Children, now it's gone, and I'm happy, do you know why?
Because
she left before me. She didn't have to go through the agony and pain of
burying me, of being left alone after my departure. I will be the one
to go through that, and I thank God. I love her so much that I wouldn't
have liked her to suffer..."
When
my father finished speaking, my brothers and I had tears streaming down
our faces. We hugged him, and he comforted us, "It's okay, we can go
home, it's been a good day."
That
night I understood what true love is; It is far from romanticism, it
does not have much to do with eroticism, or with sex, rather it is
linked to work, to complement, to care, and, above all, to the true love
that two really committed people profess."
Peace in your hearts.
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