Theresa, 63, is a widow who raised her only daughter, Mary Lou, completely on her own. Mary Lou grew up to be smart, kind, and beautiful, and everyone around them believed she had a bright and successful future waiting for her.
At 21, Mary Lou met Kang Jun, a Korean man nearly twenty years older than her. Theresa strongly opposed the relationship, not out of prejudice, but because of the large age gap and the distance between countries. However, her daughter was determined and refused to change her mind. Eventually, they had a simple wedding, and just one month later she left with him for South Korea. At the airport, they hugged and cried, both knowing their lives were about to change completely.
After that moment, Mary Lou never came back. Years passed—first one, then two, then five. The only connection Theresa had with her daughter was money sent once a year, exactly eighty thousand dollars, always accompanied by the same message: “Mom, take good care of yourself. I’m doing well.” That word, “well,” slowly became what worried Theresa the most, because it felt distant and uncertain.
They only had one video call during all those years. Mary Lou still looked beautiful, but her eyes were different—always busy, always far away. When Theresa asked why she didn’t return home, her daughter simply said: “I’m very busy, Mom.” After that, Theresa stopped asking questions, afraid of what she might hear.
As time went on, Theresa’s life improved financially thanks to the money her daughter sent, and people even told her she was lucky. But despite that, she lived in deep loneliness, eating alone every day. Every Christmas, she set a place for Mary Lou, cooked her favorite meal, and cried in silence. After twelve years of waiting, she finally made a decision that changed everything: she would travel to South Korea herself. Without telling her daughter and despite never having left the country before, she bought a ticket with trembling hands and began her journey.