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Ingredients needed:
1/2 cup of raisins
1 tablespoon of baking soda
1 lemon (for the zest and juice)
Boiling water
Preparation instructions:
Wash the raisins thoroughly using the tablespoon of baking soda to remove impurities.
Place the grapes in a container, pour boiling water over them and let them steep for 1 hour.
After this rest period, drink a glass of this infused water. This beverage is excellent for strengthening the immune system, heart function, and blood vessels.
Meanwhile, zest your lemon, then squeeze it to extract the juice.
Drain the remaining raisins and place them in a blender.
Add the lemon zest and juice to the blender, then blend until you get a smooth paste.
Pour the final mixture into a glass container.
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My husband had a vasectomy, and two months later, I discovered I was pregnant. He accused me of having an affair… but I was still unaware of the terrible shock that awaited me at the ultrasound. When I saw the two lines, I cried tears of joy. I thought it was a miracle. My hands were shaking when I took the test and I ran to show it to Diego. He was in the kitchen, drinking his coffee as if nothing had happened. “I’m pregnant,” I told her. He didn’t smile. He didn’t hug me. He didn’t even ask me how I was feeling. He simply placed his cup on the table and looked at me as if I had brought something disgusting into his home. “It’s impossible.” My throat tightened. “What do you mean, impossible?” Diego laughed coldly. “I had a vasectomy two months ago, Laura. I’m not stupid.” That word hit me like a slap in the face. Stupid. That’s what my husband called me after eight years of marriage. The same man who had said the operation was “for us” because we were having financial difficulties, because maybe later we would consider having children. I reminded him that the doctor had said we still needed follow-up tests. That the effect was not immediate. That pregnancy was still possible. But Diego had already made his decision. “Who is it?” he asked. I stared at him. ” What ? ” “Father. Tell me who he is.” That evening, he packed his suitcase. Not all of it. Just enough to show that he already had a place to stay. “I’m leaving with Paola,” he said. Paola. Her colleague. The woman who once asked me for pozole recipes and told me, “Lauri, your wedding is magnificent.” The next day, my mother-in-law arrived with two black bags. Not to console me. To retrieve Diego’s belongings. “It’s shameful, Laura,” she said, looking at my stomach with disgust. “Diego didn’t deserve this.” “I didn’t cheat on him.” She gave me a compassionate smile. “They all say that.” Within a week, half the neighborhood knew. The unfaithful wife. The unscrupulous woman. The one who became pregnant after her husband’s vasectomy. Diego posted a photo with Paola in a restaurant in Polanco. She was holding his arm while he wrote: “Sometimes, life dispels a lie to bring us peace.” I read it sitting on the floor in the bathroom, nauseous, in tears and terrified. Two weeks later, Diego asked me to meet him at a cafe. He arrived with Paola. And a file. “I want a quick divorce,” he said. “And when the baby is born, a DNA test.” Paola touched her flat stomach and gave a slight smile. “It’s better for everyone.” I looked at it. “For everyone, or for you?” Diego slammed his fist on the table. “Stop playing the victim. You’ve destroyed this family.” I opened the file. Giving up the house. Minimum child support. Conditional bodyguard. And one clause that chilled me to the bone: if the baby wasn’t his, I had to reimburse him for “all household expenses”. I gave a dry, broken laugh. “Household expenses? Are you also charging me for the years I washed your underwear?” Paola turned red. Diego gritted his teeth. “Sign, Laura. Don’t make the situation even more humiliating.” “The humiliation was that you left with your lover instead of accompanying me to this meeting.” I did not sign. The next day, I went to the ultrasound appointment alone. I put on a loose dress, did my hair and applied lipstick despite my mouth trembling. Not for Diego. In my opinion. For the innocent baby I was carrying. Dr. Salinas greeted me gently. “Were you accompanied by someone?” I shook my head. “My husband says this baby isn’t his.” She didn’t judge me. She simply asked me to lie down. The frost was cold. The screen lit up. First, a shadow. Then a slight movement. Then a heartbeat. Fort. Fast. Alive. I covered my mouth and cried. “Hello, my love,” I whispered. The doctor gave a slight smile. Then she moved the probe again. Her smile faded. She frowned, zoomed in, checked my dates, then consulted my file. “Mrs. Laura… when did you say your husband had his vasectomy?” I got a chill. “Two months ago.” She didn’t answer right away. The heart was still beating. But something else on the screen made him stop and his face became serious. “What’s wrong?” I asked. “Is my baby okay?” The doctor lowered her voice. “Your baby is fine. But I ask you to remain calm and listen.” At that precise moment, the door opened without permission. Diego entered, followed by Paola. “Perfect,” he said. “The doctor can finally tell me what stage of pregnancy this other man’s baby is at.” Dr. Salinas turned slowly towards him. Then she looked at Paola. Then the screen again. “Mr. Diego,” she said, before accusing your wife again…