At age 60, I remarried my first love: on our wedding night, as I was undressing my wife, I suddenly stepped back in shock and felt a sting of sadness upon seeing…

I am 60 years old.

At this age, most people think about retiring, looking after grandchildren, going to church, taking quiet walks in the park… not putting on a wedding dress, getting remarried, and certainly not feeling nervous about a wedding night.

But I did exactly that.

The man I married — Manuel — was my first love when I was twenty. We fell deeply in love back then, promising each other that one day we would wed. However, life had other plans.

Back then, my family was very poor. My father was gravely ill, and Manuel had to go far away to work in the north of the country. Between the distance, the responsibilities, and a few misunderstandings, we ended up losing touch.

Sometime later, my family arranged my marriage to another man. He was a good man, respectful… but he was not the man I loved.

For thirty years, I fulfilled my role as a wife. I had children, raised them, cared for the home, and kept the family together.

My husband passed away seven years ago due to an illness. Since then, I lived alone in our old house. My children already had their own families, each living in a different city.

I thought my story was already finished.

Until two years ago, at a high school reunion, I ran into Manuel again.

He had aged, of course. His hair was almost completely white and his back slightly hunched. But his eyes… they were still the same: warm, honest, full of that tranquility that always made me feel safe.

His wife had passed away more than ten years prior. He lived alone in a large house in Monterrey because his son worked in another city. We began to talk as if we had never been apart.

The coffees that at first lasted an hour gradually stretched through the entire afternoon. Then came the messages at night, the calls to ask if I had eaten dinner, if I was okay, if I needed anything.

Without realizing it, we were filling the void that two lonely people had carried for years.

One day he told me with a shy smile:

—”Maybe… we could live together. That way neither of us would be so lonely.”

I couldn’t sleep that night. My daughter opposed it immediately.

—”Mom, you’re 60! Why get married now? People are going to talk.”

My son was calmer, but he didn’t agree either.

—”Mom, your life is peaceful this way… why complicate it?”

On Manuel’s side, it wasn’t easy either. His son worried about money, the inheritance… and what people would say. But Manuel and I knew something that no one else seemed to understand.

At this age, we weren’t looking for money, or property, or a spectacular wedding. We just wanted someone who, at the end of the day, would ask:

—”Are you feeling well today?”

After many tears, arguments, and doubts, we finally made the decision. We got married. No big party. No music or fancy guests. Just a simple meal with a few close friends. I wore a dark red dress.

Manuel put on an old suit, perfectly ironed.

Some congratulated us. Others shook their heads in disapproval. I listened to them all… but I was no longer twenty years old to live according to what others thought.

The wedding night arrived. Even saying those words made me smile with embarrassment. The room was clean, with new sheets. I sat on the edge of the bed, feeling my heart beating fast, as if I were a young girl again.

I was nervous. A bit ashamed. A bit excited.

Manuel entered the room and closed the door softly behind him… And in that moment… my whole heart began to beat even faster.

If you want to know what happened next on that unexpected wedding night… continue reading the story in the first comment.