When my daughter’s music teacher looked at me across the auditorium, my past came rushing back in a way I wasn’t prepared for. I thought I’d buried that chapter of my life for good, but I was wrong.I’m 35, and this story still makes my stomach flip.Some memories don’t fade with time or soften. They just sit there, waiting, like a splinter under the skin.Callum, my husband, died a year and a half ago, before the recital that changed everything.
One minute, he was laughing at something ridiculous on television, and the next, I was holding his face in my hands, begging him to breathe.His passing was sudden and felt unfair. The kind of loss that didn’t just break you – it rearranged your life.After the funeral, I learned what silence sounded like.It sounded like our kitchen without Callum’s humming, like his guitar that never got picked up, and like my daughter closing her bedroom door and not opening it again unless she had to.Wren, my daughter, was Before her dad died, she had been fearless and curious.She used to run across playgrounds as if she owned them. She made friends everywhere, asked endless questions, and talked so much that Callum would laugh and say, “Does she even breathe between sentences?”After he passed, she folded inward.here were no more playdates or parties, just school, home, and her room.