After three years of marriage, my wife and I were still renting, struggling to make ends meet. I often felt frustrated marrying into a poor family. While others got support from in-laws, all we received were local gifts—mostly dried fish from my wife’s parents. I saw it as cheap and embarrassing.
One weekend, when a relative brought another package of fish from her parents, I angrily tossed it in the trash. Our neighbor saw me and took it home. Later, I told my wife I had given it to her because she liked it. She didn’t mind—she thought it wasn’t worth much.
The next day, we saw our neighbor with two new scooters. I was stunned. Then, a few days later, my father-in-law called to ask if we’d bought new bikes yet. That’s when we found out—he had hidden $50,000 in the bag of dried fish for us.
My wife ran to the neighbor’s house to get it back. She learned the truth—I hadn’t given it away out of kindness, I had thrown it away out of pride. She was furious, disappointed by how I had looked down on her family.
Now she’s considering divorce. All because I judged a gift by its smell—without seeing its real worth.