My world shattered when our 16-year-old son died in a tragic accident. My husband, Sam, never shed a single tear. I thought he was cold, unfeeling, and maybe even relieved. Our grief tore us apart, and eventually, our marriage collapsed.
Sam remarried years later. I moved on with my own life, though the pain of losing my child never left me. Then, 12 years after our divorce, Sam died. I expected to feel nothing, but days later his wife came to see me.
Her words cut through me like glass: “It’s time you know the truth. Sam had cancer. He knew he was dying when your son passed away. He didn’t cry because he didn’t want you to carry both griefs at once. He held it inside to protect you.”
For all those years, I thought Sam had been heartless. But the truth was, he had been carrying both his own sorrow and the weight of his illness in silence. His strength was his way of loving us, even if I never understood it until it was too late.