When my son Liam was rushed to the hospital after a severe accident, everything else in my life faded into the background.After spending the night awake in a hard waiting-room chair, I called my manager to ask for five days off so I could stay with my child.
I expected empathy—or at least basic understanding.
What I received instead was a detached response, carefully delivered.
“You need to keep your professional responsibilities separate from your personal matters,” he said.
The sentence cut deeper than I anticipated.
I stood in the quiet hospital hallway, unsure whether to push back or simply end the call.
In the end, I replied, “I understand,” and hung up.In my hands, however, I carried a small backpack and a thick folder containing hospital reports, treatment plans, and care schedules.
I walked through the doors calmly, ignoring the exhaustion that clung to me like a shadow.
When my coworkers noticed me, the office grew uncomfortably quiet.
It wasn’t shock that I had returned so soon—it was what I brought with me.
