He rented an entire hill to raise 30 pigs, then abandoned it for 5 years… When he returned, he was stunned to see what was there.
In 2018, Alejandro "Alex" Martinez, a 34-year-old man from the state of Jalisco, Mexico, had a simple dream: to escape poverty by raising pigs.
He rented an abandoned plot of land on a hillside near the town of Tapalpa and turned it into a small pig farm.

Alex invested all his savings. He even took out a loan from the Welfare Bank, built corrals, had a well drilled, and bought 30 piglets.
The day he brought the first batch of pigs up the hill, he looked at his wife, Lucia, 31, and said proudly:
—Wait for me. In just one year we'll have our own house.
But life wasn't like those success stories you see on TV.
Less than three months later, African swine fever began to spread through several livestock areas of Mexico.
One by one, the surrounding farms began to collapse.
Some farmers were forced to completely burn down their farmyards in an attempt to stop the spread of the disease.
For weeks, thick smoke covered the hills.
Lucia began to feel afraid.
"Let's sell them while they're still alive," he begged.
But Alex was stubborn.
—This will pass. We just have to hold on a little longer.
Due to constant worry and sleepless nights, her health began to deteriorate.
He even ended up hospitalized in Guadalajara due to extreme exhaustion and stress.
He spent more than a month recovering at the home of some of Lucia's relatives.
When he returned to the farm on the hill…
Half of his pigs had already died.
The price of food had doubled.
And the bank had already started calling him to demand repayment of the loan.
Every night, as the rain pounded on the tin roof of the corrals, Alex felt that everything he had built was slowly collapsing.
Until one night…
After receiving another call from a creditor, he slumped to the floor and whispered:
—I'm finished…
The next morning, he closed the farm.
He handed the key to the land to the owner, Don Ernesto, and went down the mountain in silence.
He couldn't bear the thought of seeing the total collapse of everything he had fought for.
In his mind…
Everything was lost.
For five years, Alex did not climb that hill again.
He and Lucia moved to Mexico City and started working as laborers in a factory.
Life was simple.
It wasn't a life of wealth…
but yes, peace.
Whenever someone mentioned raising pigs, Alex would smile bitterly and say:
—I just went to feed my money to the mountain.
But at the beginning of this year…
Don Ernesto called him suddenly.
Her voice was trembling.
—Alex… you have to go up.
—Something big happened at your old farm.

The next day, Alex traveled more than 50 kilometers to return to the hill.
The old dirt road was now covered with grass and trees, as if it had been abandoned for a decade.
As he climbed, his chest filled with a mixture of anxiety and fear.
Would the corrals have already collapsed?
Or perhaps there was no trace left of that old dream?
When he reached the last bend in the hill…
Alex stopped dead in his tracks.
The place he had left…
now it seemed—
Alex remained motionless.
The mountain wind blew gently, stirring the leaves of the trees that had grown where once there had only been dry earth. For a few seconds, he couldn't even breathe normally.
Because what he had before his eyes… was not ruin.
It wasn't abandonment.
It was not the ghost of a failed dream.
It was something completely different.
Where once there had been a dusty field with old wooden corrals, now a small green forest stretched out. Young trees had grown around the area. Parts of the old corral were covered with vines.
But what really left him speechless was the sound.
A sound I knew all too well.
—Oink… oink…
Alex frowned.
He looked ahead.
And then he saw it.
On the old land where he had built his pens… there were dozens of pigs walking freely.
They were not locked up.
There were no fences.
But there they were.
Big, strong, healthy.
Alex took a step forward, confused.
—What… what's going on here?
Don Ernesto, the owner of the land, walked slowly beside him.
The man was already over seventy years old. His straw hat cast a shadow over his sun-weathered face.
He smiled calmly.
—I told you something big had happened.
Alex kept looking at the animals.
Whose pigs are these?
Don Ernesto responded with a phrase that Alex would never have imagined hearing.
—They're yours.
Alex looked at him as if he had heard something crazy.
—That's impossible.
—I abandoned them five years ago.

Don Ernesto nodded.
—Yes. But not everyone died.
Alex's heart began to beat strongly.
The old man pointed towards the forest.
—After you left, a few survived. They found water in the well you built… and food in the mountains.
Alex remembered the small, deep well he had ordered drilled when he started the project.
He had spent almost all his savings in that well.
—The mountain is generous—continued Don Ernesto—. Here there are roots, fruits, insects… enough for some animals to survive.
Alex walked slowly among the trees.
The pigs didn't seem scared.
Some even approached, out of curiosity.
One of them had a black spot over his eye.
Alex stopped.
He admitted it.
—This… this was one of the first…
Her voice broke.
Don Ernesto smiled.
—Those that survived began to reproduce.
Alex slowly turned his head.
—How many are there now?
Don Ernesto let out a small laugh.
—The last time I counted… more than one hundred and twenty.
Alex felt like the world was spinning.
—One hundred and twenty?
—Perhaps more. Some live deeper into the forest.
Silence fell between the two men.
For five years…
While Alex thought that everything had been a failure…
The mountain had been multiplying what little remained.
Alex walked deeper into the ground.
The old wooden corral was still there, covered in moss.
The door was down.
He remembered the day he had brought the first thirty piglets.
He remembered his pride.
He remembered his despair when everything began to fall apart.
And now…
The mountain seemed to have kept his dream safe… until he returned.
Alex sat down on a rock.
She covered her face with her hands.
He said nothing for several minutes.

Don Ernesto sat down next to him.
—Do you know why I called you?
Alex shook his head.
—Because this land was always yours too.
—I just rented it…
"No," interrupted the old man. "You gave him life."
He pointed around.
—The well. The first animals. The care you put into this.
Alex looked up.
—But I gave up.
Don Ernesto responded calmly.
—Not the mountain.
The wind began to blow through the trees again.
Alex watched the pigs running through the grass.
Then he asked in a low voice:
—What should I do now?
Don Ernesto shrugged.
—That depends on you.
—But if you ask me…
She smiled.
—Perhaps this mountain was waiting for you.
That night, Alex did not return to the city.
He stayed in the small cabin that Don Ernesto had nearby.
He couldn't sleep.
He thought about Lucia for hours.
He thought about the years they had spent working long hours in the factory.
He thought about being tired.
He thought about the dream he had once had.
At dawn, he picked up his phone.
He dialed his wife's number.
Lucia answered half asleep.
—Alex? Is everything alright?
There were a few seconds of silence.
—Lucía…
-Yeah.
—I think… the mountain didn't eat our money.
She laughed, confused.
-That?
Alex looked out the window.
The sun rose over the trees.

And in the field… dozens of pigs were walking calmly.
—I think he kept it.
Three months later, Alex and Lucia returned to the mountain.
But this time, not as desperate dreamers.
But as people who had learned to be patient.
With the help of some villagers, they rebuilt the corrals.
They didn't lock up all the animals.
Many continued to live freely in the forest, in a natural breeding system.
A veterinarian from the region helped them organize the health management.
And a small local restaurant started buying his meat.
The news began to spread through the town.
"The farm that came back from nowhere."
One year later…
Alex had more than two hundred pigs.
But the most important thing wasn't the money.
One afternoon, as the sun set behind the mountain, Lucia came out of the small wooden house they had built.
—Alex.
He was sitting on the fence watching the animals.
-Yeah?
Lucia smiled.
—The bank called today.
Alex raised an eyebrow.
-Again?
She shook her head.
—It was to say that your loan is fully paid off.
Alex let out a small laugh.
He looked at the mountain.
She remembered the night she had whispered:
"I'm finished."
But life had other plans.
Lucia sat down next to him.
—What are you thinking about?
Alex answered by looking at the horizon.
—That sometimes we believe we've lost everything…
—when in reality…
He paused.
A group of piglets ran in front of them.
—we're just waiting for the right moment to return.
The mountain remained quiet.
As if he had known everything from the beginning.
And as the sun disappeared behind the trees…
Alex understood something he would never forget.
Some dreams don't die.They just go to sleep…until we have the courage to return.