At 61, I remarried my first love. On our wedding night, as I removed my wife’s traditional dress, I was shocked and saddened to see…

My name is  Arjun , and I’m 61 this year. My first wife passed away eight years ago from a serious illness. During all those years, I lived a solitary life. My children were all married and would come every month to give me money and medicine, and then they’d hurry off.

 

I didn’t blame my children. They were busy; I understood that. But on some rainy nights, lying there listening to the rain on the tin roof, I felt terribly small and alone.

Last year, I logged onto Facebook and accidentally found  Pooja , my first crush from high school. I really liked Pooja back then. She had waist-length hair, dark eyes, and a radiant smile. But while I was still busy preparing for my college entrance exams, her family married her off to a man 10 years her senior, and she moved to a distant city.

We lost touch after that. Forty years later, we reconnected, and she was a widow. Her husband had died five years earlier, and she was living with her youngest son, but he worked far away and rarely came home.

At first, we just sent a message to sign up. Then we called. Then we met for coffee. And then, for some reason, every few days, I would drive over to visit her, bringing her some fruit, a box of pastries, and some joint supplements.

May be an image of wedding

“How about… we two old folks get married to avoid loneliness?”

To my surprise, her eyes turned red. I was nervous and started to explain, but she just laughed and nodded.

And so, at 61, I remarried my first love.

On our wedding day, I wore a traditional dark brown suit and she wore a white silk sari. Her hair was simply styled in a small pearl clip. Friends and neighbors came to congratulate us. Everyone said, “You both look young again.”

I really felt young. That night, after we finished cleaning up the wedding party, it was almost 10 pm. I made her a cup of warm milk, then laboriously closed the doors and turned off the porch lights.

Our wedding night, the night I thought I would never have again in my old age, had finally arrived.

When I took off my wife’s sari, I was startled. All over her back, shoulders, and arms were long, old, dark scars. I froze, a pang of pain piercing my heart.

She quickly covered herself with the blanket, her eyes filled with fear. I asked, my voice trembling:

“What… What is this, Pooja?”

He turned his face away, his voice choked with emotion:

“In the old days, he used to get angry… he was verbally abusive, difficult… I never dared to tell anyone…”

I sank into bed, unable to hold back my tears. My heart ached for her, a deep, twisted ache. It turned out that for decades she had lived in fear and humiliation, afraid to share her pain with anyone. Gently, I took her hand and placed it on my chest.

“Okay… From now on, no one will hurt you again. No one has the right to hurt you anymore… except me, but I will only bring you happiness.”

She began to cry. A muffled, small, but trembling sound. I took her in my arms and hugged her tightly. Her back was thin, her bones protruding, but this small woman had spent her entire life in silent resistance.

Our wedding night wasn’t like most young couples’. We simply lay side by side, listening to the crickets chirping outside and the wind whispering through the leaves. I stroked her hair and gently kissed her forehead. She stroked my cheek too and whispered:

“Thank you. Thank you for showing me that there is still someone in this world who loves me.”

I smiled. At 61, I finally understood that happiness isn’t always about money, it isn’t about the passionate days of youth. But in old age, it’s about having a hand to hold, a shoulder to lean on, and someone willing to sit beside you all night just to listen to your heartbeat.

Tomorrow will come. I don’t know how much longer we have. But I’m sure of one thing: for the rest of her life, I will make up for what she lost, I will love and cherish her so that she will no longer be afraid of anything.

Because for me, this wedding night is the greatest gift that life has given me, after half a century of longing, missing and waiting.