I am thirty-four years old, and if someone asked me what the heaviest burden I carry is, I wouldn’t mention the money I lost, the promotions I missed, or the doors that silently closed on opportunities I could have seized. Those are all inconsequential when compared to the quiet, gnawing shame that follows me everywhere: the years I allowed my wife, Lucía, to suffer in my own home without a single word of complaint from her, yet without intervention from me either.
I never did it out of malice; cruelty would have been easier to confront, at least to admit. No, it was blindness and perhaps convenience, the sort of blindness cultivated over a lifetime in a household where my mother and three older sisters ruled the rhythm of our lives. I had been raised to obey and accept, to let decisions be made on my behalf—from what groceries to buy to what chores mattered, even what I should study or where I should work. I conformed without protest, and that habit of silent compliance had followed me into my marriage, leaving me blind to the suffering quietly endured by the woman I loved most.