Where Sacrifice Becomes Strength

By Cath Cabrera

Restart and reset—two simple words that sound light on the tongue, yet carry the weight of an entire life decision. They are often framed as fresh beginnings, but in truth, they require courage, surrender, and an honest reckoning with who we are and who we hope to become.

I learned the true meaning of these words from my mother.

There was a time when our home was full—not of luxury, but of presence. My mother’s laughter filled the kitchen. Her footsteps echoed in the early mornings as she prepared everything before the sun had fully risen. Life was simple, but it was ours.

Then reality knocked—firm, uninvited, and inevitable.

Opportunities were scarce, responsibilities heavy. As an Overseas Filipino Worker, my mother made the painful decision to leave for another country in search of stability for us. I still remember the day she left. The airport lights were too bright, the goodbyes too quiet. She carried a single suitcase, but I knew she was carrying far more than clothes. She was carrying our future.

That was her restart.

She stepped into a foreign land where the language felt unfamiliar and the nights felt longer. She reset her life—her routines, her comfort, her sense of belonging—for the promise of something better for her children. While we stayed behind, learning to live with her absence, she learned to live with loneliness.

Restarting meant leaving behind the life she knew. Resetting meant rebuilding herself from the ground up.

Back home, my siblings and I experienced our own version of restart and reset. We learned that love sometimes arrives through remittances and late-night video calls. We learned that strength can sound like a mother saying, “I’m okay,” even when she isn’t. We learned that sacrifice can look like distance.

There were moments of doubt—moments when sadness and longing tried to settle in our hearts. It is easy to fall into bitterness when life changes without asking for permission. But restart and reset are not about erasing pain; they are about growing through it.

My mother did not leave because she wanted a different life. She left so we could have one.

Today, when I hear the words restart and reset, I no longer see them as simple phrases. I see my mother boarding a plane with brave eyes. I see her choosing growth over comfort. I see her stepping into uncertainty so we could step into opportunity.

Restart and reset are not signs of failure. They are declarations of hope.

And if I have learned anything from my mother’s story, it is this: sometimes the strongest love is the one willing to begin again—far away, alone, and uncertain—just to ensure that the people back home never have to start from nothing.

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