Chapter 1378: Chapter 993: The Full-Time Mother’s Counterattack 1
"Ding"—Congratulations to the Host for completing the task in this world and obtaining 80 points of Merit Value (percentage system).
Summary of this task world:
The first thirty years of hard work and struggle, ten years of companionship and care, from forty to sixty practicing medicine to help the world, immeasurable merit, you are granted 80 points of Merit Value; may the Host continue to work hard in the upcoming tasks and strive for even better results.
Next, please check your point list.
Host Name: Tangyuan
Gender: Female (can be switched according to task)
Merit Value: 80 points added in this world (unlimited) = 160/200 (Merit Value reaches two hundred to advance to Level 1)
Current Space Level: Level 3 (Merit Value has not reached two hundred, no upgrade granted)
Beauty Value: 10 points added in this world (percentage system) = 100/100
Combat Power: 10 points added in this world (percentage system) = 60/100
IQ level: 10 points added in this world (percentage system) = 90/100
Faith Value: 100,000 points added in this world (Ten Thousand People Admiration Point System) = 100,000/150,000
This world ends. Up to now, you have experienced thirteen worlds of tempering, of which three were punishment worlds. In view of the Host’s relatively high task completion rate, you are hereby informed that there are still seven worlds to go. After completing the journey of seven worlds, if the task completion rate reaches 80%, you may be reborn into the Host World to complete the unfinished mission.
Next the System will undergo a slight change, divided into Quickly Transmigrate World and Slow World. Quickly Transmigrate World has no Golden Finger; in Slow World, Golden Finger is drawn by Faith Value lottery—whatever you draw is what you get; if you draw nothing, then there is no Golden Finger. Please be informed, Host.
Next, please choose the direction of the next world [A Quickly Transmigrate][B Slow]——
In the Poison Doctor World, she spent 20,000 Faith Value to draw a Spiritual Field; this time she chose the relatively easy no-Golden-Finger option [A Quickly Transmigrate].
The plot summary of this life is too simple: three years of child-rearing, then her ruthless husband files for divorce twice in a row. The determination to divorce shows he had planned it long ago; maybe he already had someone outside, while the woman was still foolishly staying home taking care of his kid, raising his kid, right?
After being divorced, she filed an appeal, demanding 190,000 yuan as housework compensation. How much did the court end up awarding?
Hehe, 15,000. Averaged out by month, that means as a nanny, you were worth just a bit over US$ 400.
Even the child support for the kid is only 8,400 yuan a year, which averages out to just 700 yuan a month.
The reason this gentleman gave was also something else: he said the heroine did not have a job before marriage, so it does not constitute "giving up work for the sake of caring for the family."
After the child was born, the child was raised jointly by both parties, not by her alone; the economic expenses should be shared by both.
The man has been running a shop in another place all year round, and the business has not been ideal and has not turned a profit.
In short, one sentence: after you got married you just stayed home and took care of the kid; without me, you might not even have food to eat. Even the court believes the heroine’s demand for compensation is too high—hehe, this compensation that isn’t even as good as what a nanny gets is actually considered "too high"?
When she crossed over, this Mom had already divorced. Looking at that mere 15,000 yuan compensation, she felt endlessly ridiculed by it.
Although the place she lives in is an eighteenth‑tier small city, otherwise they wouldn’t have ruled 700 yuan a month in child support. They did refer to the local living standard—note, living standard. They probably didn’t factor in education and medical expenses at all; just for food, 700 a month is enough, but what about everything else?
As expected, the weak are never understood wherever they go. And this so‑called 700 yuan child support, maybe he’ll pay it when he’s in a good mood, and when he’s in a bad mood he just won’t. So, after three years of marriage, Qi Qi ultimately only got 15,000 yuan in compensation; the in-law’s house also took back the house, and her household registration was ordered to be moved out as soon as possible.
Before she had even found a place to live, they had already started planning to clear people out and make room for the new one. How ironic and heartless is that?
Qi Qi’s education level is not high, just a technical secondary school. She originally studied accounting. After graduation she worked hard for a few years, earning only two to three thousand yuan a month. Later, because she was planning to get married, the man promised that after marriage he would support the family and told her to quit her job and stay home wholeheartedly to take care of the elders and prepare for pregnancy. Qi Qi believed him; she never expected this would become his final point of attack.
Qi Qi married the man at 20, prepared for pregnancy for a year, then raised the child for three years, which is actually four years. Yet after just a few short years, she ended up being cruelly abandoned.
When Tangyuan crossed over, Qi Qi had already divorced, but she was only just 24 years old, young, with a three‑year‑old child who was already at preschool age. So what if she’d been abandoned? As long as she didn’t give up on herself, what future could she possibly be afraid of?
In the previous life, after divorcing, Qi Qi went back to her parents’ home. She hadn’t stayed even a month before her sister‑in‑law froze her out of the house. With a child in tow—and a boy at that—everywhere she went to look for work, she hit a wall. Life was far from comfortable. Mother and son lived in that small county on her salary of one to two thousand yuan a month—rent, education, the burden of medical expenses, all pressed down on this young mother. For years she couldn’t get back on her feet.
Later her mother fell gravely ill. She quit her job to stay in the hospital and care for her. After her mother died, no one in the family had a good word for her. There was no inheritance left to her; instead, she even had to subsidize her natal family every month. Her own child was fostered at her younger brother’s home, suffering cold violence from the sister‑in‑law. Mother and son saw all the vicissitudes of the world and fully tasted the sorrow of living under someone else’s roof; they both experienced it.
Before thirty, Qi Qi’s life was a mess. After thirty, she met a divorced man. After they married, not only did she have to battle wits and courage with the man’s daughter every day, she never even saw the man’s money. Her own child’s tuition was scraped together bit by bit by her; the man did not contribute.
Within two years, she divorced again. From then on she never remarried. She took the child to the Southern region and relied on selling snacks from a street stall to barely maintain their livelihood. Life was hard, but at least she didn’t have to look at other people’s faces anymore.
After she’d saved enough for her child’s college tuition, Qi Qi herself, due to overwork, developed breast cancer. She hadn’t managed to earn the money for her son’s wedding, and instead became a burden to him. But she kept it from the child the whole time; because she couldn’t afford the surgery fee, an early‑stage illness was dragged into late‑stage, incurable. In just one summer vacation, she passed away.
She died, leaving this child to face the rest of his life alone. Qi Qi’s life was tragic: she spent her whole life for others, spent her whole life rushing about, with no kind natal family to rely on, and even less a partner with whom she could share the rest of her days. She was lonely and bitter her whole life, and in the end died full of regret.
The first thing Tangyuan did after crossing over was to move her household registration back to her parents’ home and write a letter of undertaking that any future benefits in the village would have nothing to do with her. Only after signing such a letter could she be added back to the household registration book of her natal family. Only then did she regret: why did she move her household registration in the first place? If she hadn’t, she would at least still have a home. Once she moved it, how was she any different from an outsider?
In reality, her household registration had not been moved into their family, but rather was attached to the village. She herself was the head of household. Everyone knew this counted as a temporary registration; sooner or later this household registration still had to be moved out by her.