The first year, I heard from her often. She was adjusting, she said. She was happy.
Then the calls became less frequent.
Then they stopped.
I didn't know what was happening. I tried to call. I wrote letters. I sent emails. No response. I was devastated.
I don't know what happened. I don't know if she was hurting, or if she felt I'd abandoned her. I don't know if her husband had changed her. All I know is the silence.
The Money
A year passed. Then two. Then five. I stopped waiting for her to call. But the money kept coming. Every year, exactly eighty thousand dollars, with a brief message:
"Mom, take good care of yourself. I'm fine."
But that word—fine—worried me. It's what people say when they don't want to tell the truth.
The Decision
Finally, I made a decision. I'm going to Korea. I'm going to find her. For a woman of sixty-three who had never been out of the country, it was madness. But I bought the ticket with trembling hands and went.
The House
I arrived and took a taxi to her house. It was a two-story house, quiet, very quiet. The garden was beautiful, but lifeless. I knocked on the door. No one answered. It was unlocked.
I went inside. The house was clean, very clean. There were no signs that a man lived there. Not a trace of men's clothing. Not even the smell of food. I went upstairs. One room with women's clothes. Another like an office, in case you don't use it. And the last one… I was speechless. Boxes, so many boxes, full of cash.
I was blank.
At that moment, she opened the downstairs door.
The Reunion
She looked at me, shocked. "Mom? What are you doing here?"
She was thinner than I remembered. Tired. But still beautiful.
"I had to know," I said. "I had to see you."
She sat down, and I sat beside her. She told me the truth. Kang Jun was dead. He'd died two years ago. She'd been hiding his death from me, grieving alone.
She had started a business. It had grown. She was wealthy. She didn't need the money I'd been sending back. She'd been sending it to me because she wanted to take care of me.
"Why didn't you tell me?" I asked.
"Because I didn't want to see the pity in your eyes," she said.
"Everyone thought I was a fool," she said. "They said he'd taken advantage of me. I needed to prove that it was a real marriage. That it meant something."
"Was it a real marriage?" I asked.
"Yes," she said. "It was. I loved him, and he loved me. And I'm proud of the life I've built."
The Aftermath
I stayed with her for a few weeks. She showed me her home, her life. I met her friends, her colleagues.
Before I left, we talked about the future. She promised to call. She promised to visit. She promised to let me in.
A Final Thought
I never imagined my daughter would move to Korea. I never imagined she'd build a life so far away. But she did. She built a life I'm proud of.
And I will always be grateful I had the courage to go looking for her.
Have you ever traveled to find a loved one? Share your story in the comments. ✈️
