23/01/2026
đłđCameroonian man shares a shocking story;
âI am not telling this story to get pity.
I am telling it because this pain is real.
I married my wife with a clean heart.
I loved her genuinely.
I trusted her completely.
When I traveled to Europe, life was not easy.
People think once you reach Europe, money grows on trees. That is a lie.
I suffered. I worked like a machine.
Jobs that broke my back.
Jobs that paid little but drained everything from me.
I slept late and woke up early.
Sometimes I ate once a day.
Sometimes I cried alone in my room.
But I kept going because I had one goal â to bring my wife to Europe so we could build a better life together.
I did everything the right way:
Legal papers.
Marriage documents.
Immigration forms.
Lawyersâ fees.
Endless appointments.
Every money I made went into that process.
I denied myself clothes, enjoyment, happiness â just so she could come.
When her visa was finally approved, I felt like a king.
I was proud.
I felt like a real man.
I told everyone, âMy wife is coming.â
I imagined peace, love, family, growth.
The day she arrived, I was so happy I almost cried at the airport.
I carried her bags like treasure.
I showed her everything.
I gave her my house â the same house I struggled to pay rent for.
I registered things jointly.
I introduced her to my friends.
I helped her settle in.
I supported her emotionally and financially.
But slowly⌠things changed.
Europe changed her.
She was no longer the woman I married back home.
She became cold.
She became proud.
She became someone I could not recognize.
She started talking to me with anger.
Everything annoyed her â my job, my money, my silence, even my breathing.
She compared me with other men and told me I was not doing enough.
She said Europe opened her eyes.
She said she deserved better.
I kept quiet because I loved her.
I thought marriage meant patience.
I thought if I tried harder, things would return to how they were.
But one day, everything ended.
There was a loud knock on the door.
When I opened it, police officers were standing there.
My heart started beating fast. I didnât understand what was happening.
My wife stood behind them, looking calm.
They said she had reported me.
They said she had reported me.
I was shocked.
I tried to speak, but my mouth was dry.
I couldnât understand how the same woman I suffered for could do this to me.
I was told to pack a few things and leave the house immediately.
I was warned not to come back.
That house was mine.
I paid for it.
I built my life inside it.
But I walked out like a criminal.
She stayed inside.
I stood outside with a small bag and tears I couldnât cry.
After that day, my life became a mess.
I slept in friendsâ houses.
Sometimes I slept without peace.
Shame followed me everywhere.
I stopped calling people because I didnât know how to explain my situation.
Then the divorce papers came.
No discussion.
No apology.
No mercy.
Soon after, immigration contacted me.
My residence permit depended on my marriage.
Once the marriage was gone, my stay was gone too.
Everything I worked for collapsed.
She stayed in Europe.
I was deported.
I went back home with nothing.
Not even pride.
People said, âBut you were in Europe.â
They didnât know Europe destroyed me.
The pain was not only losing my wife.
It was losing myself.
Up till today, the question still burns inside me:
Was loving her my biggest mistake?
Donât pity me.
Tell me your truth
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