The morning I walked into the office with a stack of neatly labeled folders, no one there knew the truth of the night I had just survived. I had spent hours in the fluorescent-lit, sterile hum of an ICU, sitting by my son’s bedside, holding his hand through beeping monitors and the occasional murmur of nurses. My son had been admitted after a sudden accident—a slip, a fall, an incident so quick that it felt unreal, leaving me suspended somewhere between disbelief and frantic worry.
As soon as I realized the gravity of the situation, I called my boss and asked for five urgent days off. His response, however, was a cold reminder to “separate work from private life.” I should have protested, demanded compassion, or simply walked out of the office then and there. I should have yelled until he understood that life doesn’t pause for deadlines. But exhaustion has a peculiar way of sharpening priorities; in that moment, I realized that confrontation wouldn’t help anyone. I would focus on what I could control, not the rigid indifference of someone else.