Her voice was calm, but that made it worse. This was not the Rebecca I thought I had known. This was someone who had been quietly breaking while I stood beside her and saw only distance.
“Why didn’t you tell me?” I asked before I could stop myself. “Why did you go through all of that alone?”
Rebecca finally looked at me. In her eyes, I saw years of pain and shame.
“Because I was afraid you would leave,” she said. “And then I was afraid you would stay only because you felt sorry for me.(simo)Either way, I thought I would lose you.”
As Rebecca continued speaking, our marriage began rearranging itself in my mind. The emotional distance I had believed was proof that love had faded, the small arguments that grew into walls, the way she stopped wanting to see friends or go places—all of it looked different now.
I remembered mornings when she said she felt sick and stayed in bed long after I left for work. I had thought she was avoiding responsibility. Now I wondered if those were days when anxiety had made ordinary life feel impossible. I remembered inviting her out with friends and feeling frustrated when she made excuses. I had thought she no longer cared. Now I understood that social situations may have felt unbearable to her.
“There were signs,” I said quietly, more to myself than to her. “I just didn’t know how to read them.”
Rebecca gave a sad smile.
“I became good at hiding it,” she said. “Too good, maybe. I told myself that if I looked normal long enough, maybe I would eventually feel normal.”