Since the day I welcomed my stepfather to live with me, the money in the cupboard has been gradually decreasing. I secretly followed him and was SHY at the truth.

Since the day my stepfather came to live with me, the money in the cupboard kept decreasing. I secretly followed him and then SHRINKED at the truth.

I am 30 years old this year. Tatay left home when I was 6, leaving Nanay and me alone in the world. My mother did not remarry, working 2-3 jobs to raise me. For many years, it was just the two of us relying on each other in a rented room in Quezon City.

After going to college and working, being able to take care of myself made my mother less miserable. Through an acquaintance in the parish, my mother met a man named Tito Danilo — now my uncle Dan.

Tito Dan had been married once and had a son, but the son lived with his biological mother in Laguna; the two of us rarely saw each other so our relationship was weak.

Since the day I moved in with Nanay, uncle Dan has treated me very well. I feel that he truly cares for me, even treating me like his own daughter. But in my heart, I still kept a little distance, hiding everything.

Until one day, I accidentally heard a conversation between my mother and my stepfather. That day, I came home early, standing outside the door, I heard Nanay say she wanted to have another child to make the family closer. Uncle Dan gently refused:

— “We have Lyn, that’s enough. I’m afraid that if I have another child, she will see me as redundant and think too much. Even though she hasn’t opened her heart to me yet, in my heart, she is my biological child. She has lacked a father since she was young, so I need to give her all my love.

I’m also old, giving birth now is risky. Who will take care of her later, I can’t make Lyn suffer.”

I couldn’t hold back my tears. The man I was wary of secretly loved me so much. From that day on, I changed my perspective, opened my heart, and gradually became close to Tatay Dan.

At the age of 24, I got married, and not long after, I had a child. With my husband’s love, my in-laws’ love, and a stable job in Ortigas, I could not have wished for anything more. Then an incident happened: Nanay passed away due to a serious illness. I was devastated for a while. Thinking about what my uncle had done for me and my children, I decided to bring Tatay Dan to live with my family in Pasig so that I could take care of him, as a way to repay him.

At first, my uncle did not agree, insisting “don’t bother the children”. I begged him for a long time before he agreed to move back.

But from the day my uncle moved in, I discovered something strange: the money in the cupboard was gradually decreasing. My husband and I both went to work early, my husband came home later than me; my son went to school. During the day, my uncle was the only one left in the house.

At first, I thought my uncle had just taken some money to go to the market, so I kept quiet. But the repeated occurrences made me suspicious.

One day, I got off work early. Knowing that my uncle was picking up my son by jeepney, I secretly checked the cupboard – it was missing again. I decided to install a small camera in the bedroom, waiting to see what would happen.

The very next day, I saw someone enter the room, gently opening the drawer. And it wasn’t Tatay Dan — it was
my son. My heart sank. I didn’t expect my son to do that.

When I questioned him and showed him the evidence, he burst into tears, mumbling:

— “Mom, I only took a little money to buy a birthday present for my friend…”

Hearing what he said, I felt both heartbroken and regretful. I blamed myself for not teaching him well enough, allowing him to secretly take the money. I was even more ashamed when I almost wrongly accused Tatay Dan — the man who once refused to have a biological child just to give all his love to me.

That night, I apologized to my uncle. He just waved his hand: “Children don’t know how to ask. You can teach them.” Then he coaxed his nephew, telling the story of the old days when he wanted to buy a yo-yo but didn’t dare ask Nanay, and in the end, he went to collect empty bottles to sell for money — and he smiled gently. Not a word of blame.

I sat next to my child, taught him to say “please – thank you – excuse me”, explained allowance and savings. Together, I made a “three-compartment” piggy bank:

Share (for those in need),

Save (buy gifts on the right occasion),

Spend (small daily things).
My child nodded, still wiping away tears.

The next morning, I took my child to the barangay hall to meet the guidance counselor in the parenting seminar program. My child practiced saying “I’m sorry” and “Next time I’ll ask first”. In the afternoon, my child wrote an apology card and stuck it on the cupboard: “I promise not to steal money again.”

In the evening, I set out a small tray of food and put two candles — one for Nanay, one for the new promise. I told my uncle: “From now on, all expenses in the house will be posted on the refrigerator; the key to my cupboard will be hung on a high hook, my husband and I will take turns checking; and I will give him money clearly every week.” My uncle smiled: “Only when there are rules in the house can children grow up.”

A few days later, the boy happily boasted: he pooled his money to buy colored pencils for his friend Miko on her birthday — using his ‘savings’ money, with his mother at the National Book Store counter watching and paying the difference. He also asked me to write: “From your classmate.” I looked at Tatay Dan — he nodded, his eyes warm like the lights of a church on Sunday afternoon.

I understood: my childhood was deprived because of the absence of a father, but life gave me a precious gift — an uncle who, although not related by blood, was warm and tolerant like a brother. That love, sometimes, is even more precious than blood.

That night, I left my son three lines on his desk:

Please – No secret.

To tell the truth – No fear.

Thank you – Even if it’s a small matter.

Then I turned on my phone and changed the contact name from “Tito Dan” to “Tatay Dan”. My hand touched the two words “Tatay” and felt strangely warm. In the kitchen, my uncle was boiling water to make cocoa for my nephew, softly singing an old kundiman song. I suddenly felt that this house, in the middle of noisy Manila, was peaceful in the simplest way: trusting each other, teaching each other, and loving each other properly.

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