After the divorce, my world shrank into survival. I rented a damp little room behind an old grocery store. The walls smelled of mildew, and the pipes clanged through the night. I took whatever work I could find—cleaning offices before sunrise, watching cars during events, collecting bottles for spare change. Pride stopped being something I could afford, but I held onto what little dignity I had left.

There were nights I went to bed hungry, my stomach aching, my mind filled with anger and regret. Still, I never touched that card. It felt like an insult I refused to accept.

Years passed. My body grew weaker, slower. My joints stiffened, my back ached, and some mornings just getting out of bed felt like climbing a mountain. My children visited when they could, leaving small amounts of money and promises they couldn’t always keep. I never told them how bad things had gotten. They had their own lives—I didn’t want to become a burden.

Then one afternoon, my body finally gave out. I collapsed just outside my door.

When I woke up, I was in a hospital bed. A young doctor stood beside me, his voice calm but serious.

“You’re severely malnourished,” he said. “You need treatment. This can’t wait.”