Real stories. Real feelings

Author: Thangtlvip (Page 16 of 16)

When My Entire Class Turned Against Me, the Girl I Disliked the Most Was the Only One Who Stood Up for Me

In eleventh grade, I used to think I had a lot of friends.

I was a good student, I spoke well in class, and I joined almost every group activity. Wherever I went, there was always someone calling my name, waving me over, saving me a seat. I had never imagined there would come a day when I would walk into my classroom and be met with whispers, cold stares, and the suffocating feeling that the entire world had quietly moved to the other side.

It all started with an anonymous post in our class group chat.

The post said I was fake. It said I only acted nice to get teachers to like me. It accused me of talking badly about my classmates behind their backs. It even claimed that I had deliberately stolen the class secretary position from someone else.

Underneath the post, the comments multiplied quickly. Some people called me two-faced. Others said they had “known it all along” and were just waiting for someone to finally say it out loud.

My hands were shaking when I read it.

What made it worse was that the post included details from our daily school life—details that sounded believable enough to make everyone think it had to be true. Overnight, I went from being someone people liked to someone people looked at with distrust.

The next morning, the moment I stepped into the classroom, I felt it.

The air was cold, heavy, and strange.

People who used to chat with me every day now suddenly avoided eye contact. A few of them lowered their voices when I walked past. Even Ha, my closest friend, only looked at me for a second before quickly looking away.

I sat down in my seat and tried to act normal, but under the desk, my fingers were clenched so tightly that my nails dug into my skin.

Only one person in that room did not look at me the way everyone else did.

It was My—the girl I had never really liked.

My was smarter than me, quieter than me, and far more distant than anyone else in class. She rarely got involved in gossip, barely spoke unless it was necessary, and always gave off the impression that she simply didn’t care whether people liked her or not. I had always thought she was arrogant. To be honest, I had often felt irritated by her. Every time a teacher assigned something important, My would do it so perfectly that the rest of us looked clumsy beside her.

That morning, while the whole class was whispering and watching me out of the corners of their eyes, My suddenly stood up.

“If no one has proof,” she said coldly, “then stop looking at someone like she’s guilty.”

The classroom went silent.

A boy in the front row let out a short laugh.
“But the post was pretty specific,” he said.

My turned to look at him directly.

“Specific doesn’t mean true.”

Someone else spoke up.
“But a lot of people think it sounds believable.”

My didn’t hesitate.

“‘A lot of people think so’ isn’t the same thing as the truth,” she said. “It just means a lot of people are willing to follow a crowd.”

The whole room fell completely still.

I looked up at her, stunned.

I had never imagined that if anyone ever defended me, it would be her.

During break, I followed her out into the hallway.

“Thank you,” I said quietly.

She kept walking without looking at me.
“I’m not defending you,” she replied. “I just hate group bullying.”

I stopped in my tracks, feeling embarrassed and grateful at the same time.

The days that followed were some of the hardest days of my life.

People no longer talked to me the way they used to. I sat in class feeling like an outsider in my own life. Sometimes I locked myself in the bathroom during breaks just to cry where no one could see me. I didn’t know how to defend myself against something as poisonous as suspicion. There was no real evidence, but there was something almost worse—people’s willingness to believe the worst about me.

The only person who treated me normally was My.

She never made a big deal out of it. She never tried to comfort me with dramatic words. But sometimes she would leave a bottle of water on my desk. Sometimes she would slide her notes over if I missed something in class. When I had a fever and couldn’t focus, she quietly handed me the homework list before leaving school.

One afternoon after class, she suddenly asked me,
“Do you want to find out who wrote the post?”

I nodded immediately.

It turned out that My had already been suspicious for a while. She said the writing style in the post felt familiar. Certain phrases and expressions sounded exactly like Ha, my best friend.

I was shocked.

Ha and I had been close since middle school. She knew my secrets, my fears, the things I never told anyone else. I couldn’t believe she could be the one behind something like this.

But once My said it, little details I had ignored started to come back to me.

Ha had changed after our homeroom teacher selected me to represent the class in an academic competition—a position she had always assumed would be hers. I had never realized she had carried that resentment inside her. I thought she had been happy for me. I thought she was my friend.

After almost a week, My found proof.

Another classmate had accidentally seen Ha using a secondary account—the same one that matched the anonymous profile from the post. When people confronted her, she broke down crying and admitted everything.

That day, the classroom was so quiet you could hear the ceiling fan turning above us.

Ha cried and cried as she spoke.
“I only wanted people to dislike you for a little while,” she said. “I didn’t think it would get this bad.”

I stood there staring at the person I had trusted most, and I felt something inside me ache in a way I had never known before.

I realized then that the worst kind of hurt doesn’t always come from strangers. Sometimes it comes from the people you trusted enough to hand your heart to.

After that, many of my classmates apologized.

Some said they had been too quick to judge. Some admitted they had followed the comments because everyone else was doing the same. Some avoided the topic completely because they were too ashamed to talk about it.

But the person I kept thinking about was My.

I had disliked her because she was distant. I had judged her because she was quiet. I had assumed that someone who wasn’t warm or friendly on the surface would never stand by me when it mattered.

I was wrong.

In the end, the person who protected my dignity and helped me hold on to the truth was the girl I had understood the least.

At the end of eleventh grade, during our class closing ceremony, our homeroom teacher said something I have never forgotten.

“You may forget a lot of things after you leave school,” she told us, “but remember this: true friendship is not about who is always beside you when life is easy. It is about who dares to stand beside you when everyone else turns away.”

I turned to look at My.

She was sitting there as usual, back straight, expression calm, almost as if none of it mattered to her at all.

After school that day, I slipped a small note into her hand.

On it, I had written only one sentence:

Thank you for believing me when the rest of the world didn’t.

She read it, then looked at me and gave a small smile.

“Don’t be so dramatic,” she said.

I laughed, even though my eyes were burning.

And from that day on, I understood something I had been too young to understand before:

Friendship does not always begin with closeness.

Sometimes, it begins with the one person who is brave enough to speak one fair sentence for you while everyone else chooses silence.

On My Wedding Day, My Ex Came Back Carrying a Little Girl

On the day I put on my wedding dress, I thought the only thing making me nervous would be the usual things—the trembling excitement, the happy tears, the overwhelming feeling of stepping into a new chapter of my life. I never imagined that the thing that would make my heart shake the most was seeing Nam—the man who had disappeared from my life three years earlier—standing at the far end of the wedding hall, holding a little girl who looked about two years old in his arms.

I froze.

Three years ago, Nam had left without a single explanation. We had been together for four years, from university until the time we were supposed to start building a future together. We had once dreamed of a small house, a simple wedding, and two children. And yet, right before I was going to take him home to meet my family, he suddenly cut off all contact, changed his phone number, and vanished as if he had never existed.

I had lived in pain for a long time after that. I thought he had betrayed me. I thought he had fallen in love with someone else. I thought maybe I simply had not been good enough to make him stay. It was only later, when I met Hai, that I slowly learned how to breathe again. Hai was the kind of man who patiently picked up every broken piece inside me and stayed beside me through the darkest years. He was the one who made me believe that not every love story had to end in loss.

And today was my wedding day with Hai.

But the moment Nam appeared, every memory I had locked away came rushing back like a flood.

Tôi đứng trong phòng tân hôn, tay lạnh cóng và cứng đờ. Cánh cửa đột nhiên mở ra, và người em họ tôi chạy vào, vẻ mặt bối rối.

“Someone says he needs to speak to you for a minute,” she said. “He’s holding a little girl. Do you know him?”

I looked at myself in the mirror. My face was carefully made up, but no amount of makeup could hide the panic in my eyes.

I told her not to let anyone make a scene, then I walked out toward the back of the venue.

Nam was standing there. He looked thinner than before, more worn out, his face marked by exhaustion. The little girl in his arms had wide eyes and was clinging tightly to his shirt.

He looked at me for a long time, as if he couldn’t believe I was standing there in a white wedding gown.

“I’m sorry for coming today,” he said quietly. “But I didn’t have any other choice.”

I bit my lip.

“Why are you here?” I asked. “To congratulate me, or to ruin this day?”

Nam was silent for a few seconds before answering.

“I came to give you the explanation I should have given you three years ago.”

I let out a bitter laugh.

“And what would that change now?”

He looked down at the little girl, then spoke very slowly.

“Three years ago, my mother was diagnosed with terminal cancer. My family was already drowning in debt. My father had left years earlier, and everything fell onto my shoulders. I was offered a job abroad, but I had to leave immediately. I wanted to tell you. I wanted to explain everything. But my mother begged me not to drag you into that mess. She cried and told me you were still young, that you shouldn’t have to bury your youth in a collapsing family.”

I stared at him, not knowing whether to be angry or heartbroken.

He continued, his voice low and rough.

“So I chose the most cowardly thing possible. I disappeared. I thought that if you hated me enough, you would forget me and move on. And maybe… maybe I thought that was the only way to set you free.”

I clenched my hands so tightly that my nails dug into my palms.

“And the child?” I asked.

Nam gently brushed the girl’s hair back from her forehead.

“She’s my daughter. Her mother died in an accident about six months ago. She was a former colleague. We found each other after I had already convinced myself that I had lost you forever.”

Then he raised his head and looked straight into my eyes. His eyes were red.

“I’m not here to ask for anything. I’m not here to drag you back into the past. I found out about your wedding by chance yesterday. And I realized that if I didn’t come today, I would remain a coward in your memory for the rest of my life.”

I had imagined this moment so many times over the years. I thought if I ever saw him again, I would cry, scream, demand answers, ask him why he had done this to me. But strangely, as I listened to him, none of those things came.

For three years, I had lived with a question that had no answer. I hated him not only because he left, but because he made me believe I had been abandoned for no reason. And now, with the truth finally standing in front of me, the pain no longer felt sharp. It was still there, but it had softened into something sad and quiet.

I looked at the little girl, now half-asleep on his shoulder, and felt my anger loosen.

“So you only came here to tell me this?” I asked.

He nodded.

“Yes. I wanted you to know that there hasn’t been a single day I didn’t regret the way I left.”

From the front of the hall, the wedding music began to rise. It was the song Hai had chosen himself because he knew I loved gentle melodies.

A small smile touched my lips.

“Thank you for finally telling me the truth,” I said. “At least now I can move forward without carrying that question in my heart anymore.”

Nam lowered his head.

“Are you happy?” he asked.

I looked toward the main entrance, where Hai was waiting in his suit. Even from a distance, I could see the calm in his face. He wasn’t rushing me. He wasn’t angry. He wasn’t suspicious. He was simply there, waiting with the same quiet patience he had always shown me.

I nodded.

“Yes,” I said. “I am. Very happy.”

Nam smiled then—a sad smile, but also one filled with relief.

“That’s good,” he whispered.

I turned to leave, took a few steps, then stopped.

“Nam.”

He looked up.

“I hope you’ll live well too,” I said softly. “For your daughter.”

He tightened his arms around the little girl and nodded.

Then I walked back toward the ceremony.

As the doors opened and the music swelled, every eye in the room turned toward me. But this time, my heart was no longer trembling because of the past. I understood, finally, that some people enter our lives not to stay forever, but to teach us something we need in order to grow.

Hai took my hand as I reached the altar.

“Are you okay?” he asked quietly.

I looked at him and smiled from somewhere deep inside me.

“Yes,” I said. “Now I really am.”

And in that moment, I knew I was not only stepping into a marriage.

I was also finally stepping out of a wound I had carried for far too long.

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