A 17-Year Regret: Meeting My Ex-Wife Working as a Cleaner
It had been 17 years since I got divorced and left the old house empty-handed. I thought time had erased all memories, but just one moment of meeting my ex-wife, all the past suddenly rushed back, sharp and suffocating.

That day, I was inspecting a newly acquired office building. In my custom-made suit, stepping out of my luxurious car, I carried the familiar feeling of a successful man: being welcomed, being respectfully served, being looked up to. The light reflecting off the marble floor, the smell of the air conditioning mixed with the scent of luxury, once again satisfied me with the “success” I had painstakingly built.
However, just one small scene brought my whole world crashing down.
Walking down the empty corridor, I saw a female cleaner standing on her tiptoes, wiping dust off a door. Her thin figure in a faded blue uniform, a few grey hairs clinging to her neck with sweat… That image made my heart stop. There was something so familiar that I couldn’t take my eyes off her.
And then she turned around. In that moment, I was stunned to realize it was Quyen—my ex-wife. Back then, Quyen vehemently opposed me continuing to borrow money to start a business after many failures. She even threatened that if I persisted, she would divorce me and take our child away, and I would never get to see my son again. Nevertheless, I resolutely chose my career over my wife and son.
In the first years after the divorce, I was still deeply in debt, constantly failing, so I had no face to see Quyen and my son. When my career took off, I looked for them, but they had moved, and I couldn’t contact them or find any information.
It was unexpected that, after 17 years, I would meet my ex-wife in this situation. At that moment, I stood there dumbfounded; I almost didn’t recognize her because life had worn her down so much. Her rough hands, her weary face, her small stature… everything spoke of how difficult her life must have been. A feeling of both guilt and foolish self-satisfaction welled up in me, as if I had the right to compensate her with money, as if money could apologize for my 17-year absence.
I quickly pulled out my wallet, took out a thick wad of cash, and almost shoved it into her hand.
“Take this… in case you need it.”
I said it condescendingly, like a benefactor. But she pulled her hand back, and a few bills fell to the floor. When she looked up at me, her eyes were no longer avoiding mine, but only contained a sense of calm mixed with sorrow.
“No need.”
In that moment, I was so embarrassed I wanted to disappear. But the biggest shock came from her next sentence.
“Khánh got accepted into X University.”
I froze, my whole body numb. My son? The child I barely raised, the one I thought might be living a hard life at the bottom of society, had been accepted into a top university in the country.
I couldn’t utter a word. The remaining bills in my hand dropped instinctively, as if they suddenly became filthy in the face of my son’s achievement.
Quyen told me that he was worried about things from a young age and never demanded anything. Without money for extra tutoring, he would stand all day at the bookstore reading. His grades were always the highest, and he worked as a tutor to cover his living expenses. He applied for a student loan for college tuition and said he could pay it back himself later.
And me, his father, what was I doing? I was drinking with clients, playing golf, enjoying life with young beauties… living the rich life I always dreamed of, and deluding myself that I had nothing to feel guilty about.
But the truth was, I had no right to be proud, and no right to stand before the two of them. When I asked if I could meet him, my ex-wife just shook her head.
“He knows about you, but he’s never asked. When the admission letter arrived, I asked if he wanted me to tell you. He said: ‘No need. My life… is none of his business.'”
That one sentence shattered all the arrogance I had built up over 17 years. I thought I was rich, I thought I was successful, I thought I could solve everything by just throwing money at it. But I was so poor that I didn’t even have a place in my son’s heart.
As I watched Quyen’s thin but straight back as she pulled the cleaning cart away, I finally understood that what I had lost was not just a wife, not just a family, but the right to see my son grow up. The right to be there when he stumbled or succeeded. The right to be called “Dad” without being ignored like a stranger.
For 17 years, I traded everything for money, but I lost my whole world. And what was lost can never be bought back with money.