


Rosa Pich, mother of 18 children - three of them already in heaven - and widow, is a whirlwind of joy, faith and contagious energy. In her new book "También hay cielo", she demonstrates that one can laugh in the midst of pain, and that this can be transformed into teaching. With her famous "organized chaos", Rosa turns each day into a spectacle of family life, showing it in her networks with the objective of bringing "a little grain of hope" to all those who need it.
Since their first years of marriage, Rosa and her husband decided to leave their family in the hands of providence. "We didn't decide whether to have one, two, three... We did talk about wanting a large family, but in the end it's what God gives you," she recalls.
Their personal experience has not been easy: when their third child was born, he died after ten days, and four months later the second one died, both with heart problems. The doctors advised them not to have any more children, assuring them that they could all die, and even that the eldest would only live to be three years old. Even so, Rosa and Chema decided to go ahead: "Nobody gets into your bed, we are going to do what we really want to do", says Rosa, and so they took the risk and trusted.

For Rosa, each child is an undeserved gift from God, a temporary gift that parents receive to educate and accompany, knowing that soon they will follow their own path. She emphasizes the enormous responsibility that comes with having the freedom to decide to form a family: "God gives us the freedom..., if mom and dad say no, they will not be born", she points out, stressing that the decision to bring a child into the world belongs to the parents alone, and that this responsibility transcends earthly life. Each child demands dedication, sacrifice and service: although sometimes the small details of raising a child seem overwhelming, Rosa reminds us that it is an act of adoration and love, a constant giving that strengthens the family bond.
Educating in faith
Rosa explains that in her home there is a life of piety: "We go to Mass on Sundays, and on the days we can during the week, too. At home we pray the Rosary", without the children deciding whether to participate or not, just as "you don't let them decide if they want to go to school". Rosa shows her children how to integrate the spiritual into their daily lives. "The children have to see the parents pray," she says, stressing that spirituality is learned above all by example.
However, as children grow up, they make their own decisions: "we have to let them make mistakes". Each child has his or her own identity, and although education in the faith is constant, she respects that, when the time comes, the children will decide for themselves. "You educate at home a faith lived from the cradle, but in the end you have to respect," she explains.
The loss
In spite of having lived through the death of three children and that of her husband, Rosa, in her new book 'There is also Heaven', affirms that she has been "very pampered by the Lord". She sees pain as an opportunity to transform it into something more fertile, into a teaching. For this reason, she stresses the importance of facing reality and not running away from it. When she sees that she is overwhelmed, she knows who to turn to: "Lord, help me. Give me strength because I cannot do it alone. She comments that we have been created to be happy here on Earth, "even though sometimes we forget".
There is also Heaven

Influencer by chance
Sharing her testimony and the way God has worked in her life comes naturally to her. She says that she started on Instagram almost by chance, following the suggestion of a son, and that she never sought fame or followers. For her, the key is to show life as it is, with its joys, its falls and its challenges, like when her son Rafa faced cancer: "the Lord has wanted to show through my account... another way of seeing the disease... to bring out a more human side and give a grain of hope". Rosa believes that, through her example and testimony, she can transmit consolation, hope and motivation, helping others to face daily difficulties and to value family life as a space where faith and dedication are lived with authenticity.
With more than 123,000 followers in its account @comoserfelizconunodostreshijosher publications show both the chaos and the fun of living with 15 children. It is what she calls "organized chaos": a balance between the inevitable disorder of a large family and its overflowing joy. Rosa Pich believes that people follow her because she reflects real life, without filters, showing both the challenges and the laughter, the improvised games and anecdotes that fill her home. That chaos, far from being negative, generates optimism, creativity and closeness, and transmits that, although life is not perfect, family life can be fun, enriching and deeply human.