My name is Aling Teresa. I’m 58 years old—a simple mother, a market vendor, and a woman who raised her only son, Marco, by myself. Soon, he would be marrying the love of his life, Lara, a kind, educated young woman from a well-off family.

Three months before the wedding, I worried constantly.
Not about the reception.
Not about the expenses.
But about something much simpler:

I had nothing decent to wear.

THE OLD GREEN DRESS

When I was younger, I had owned one special dress—a green one with small embroidered details across the chest. It wasn’t expensive, but it carried memories:
• I wore it when I gave birth to Marco.
• I wore it again when he finished college.

It was already faded and worn, but it was the nicest thing I had. I tried borrowing clothes from neighbors, but none felt right. Pretending to be someone I wasn’t only made me feel smaller.

So, I chose honesty.
I chose the dress that had been with me through my life as a mother.

THE WEDDING DAY

When the wedding day arrived, everything sparkled—flowers, lights, music, people dressed in elegant gowns and tailored suits. I felt tiny among them.

As I stepped into the church, I felt the stares.

“Is that the groom’s mother?”
“She should’ve dressed better…”

I kept my eyes low, trying not to let shame overwhelm me. I didn’t want Marco to worry.

But then someone came toward me.

THE MOMENT THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING

It was Lara.

She looked radiant in her white gown, but her eyes were soft and full of emotion. She gently took my hand—my hand shaped by years of washing, carrying, selling vegetables in the market.

With a trembling voice, she asked,
“Mom… is that the dress you wore when Marco was born?”

I froze.
“How did you know?”

She smiled through her tears.
“Marco told me. He said whenever life felt heavy, he remembered you in that green dress—holding him, loving him, doing everything alone. He said that dress is the symbol of your strength.”

Her words washed over me like warm sunlight.

Then she hugged me—right there in front of everyone.
Marco stepped forward, wiping my tears.

“Mom,” he whispered, “thank you for every sacrifice. That green dress is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen because it reminds me of you.”

THE LAUGHTER AND THE TEARS

After the ceremony, people approached me—not with judgment, but with warmth.

“You look lovely, Mother Teresa.”
“That shade of green suits you so well.”

 

Later, during the reception, Lara spoke into the microphone.

“I want to honor this woman,” she said, pointing to me.
“She may not wear designer clothes, but she is the reason Marco is the man I love. If there is any woman I should look up to as a wife, it is Mother Teresa.”

The hall erupted in applause.
I stood there clutching the skirt of my old dress, crying—but for the first time, they were tears of joy.

On that day, my humble green dress felt like the finest gown in the world.

THE LESSON

 

Clothes do not define dignity.
Price does not define beauty.

A mother’s love is stitched into every thread—through the sacrifices she makes, the nights she stays awake, the silent strength she carries.

And if love had a color, it would not be red or white.
It would be green—
the color of life, of growth,
the color of a mother who gives everything,
even when she has so little.