I rented Joaquín’s apartment to a young couple who pays me on time and treats me with respect. I sold some things, kept others and donated Mateo’s clothes to children who did need warmth. I kept his baseball glove, a Joaquín cap and a photo where the two appear laughing with a tiny fish that they pretended was huge.
Six months later I left Guadalajara. First I traveled through places that Joaquín and I dreamed of visiting: Oaxaca, Chiapas, then further away. I write this from a cabin near the mountains of Colorado, where mornings are cold and silence no longer feels like punishment.
Sometimes they ask me if I miss my family. I miss the idea I invented about them. I miss the mother who I thought would run to the hospital. To the father who I thought would carry his grandson’s coffin with dignity. To the sister I thought would cry with me. But I don’t miss real people, those who chose beach, money and comfort over love.
Losing Joaquín and Mateo left me with a void that nothing is going to fill. But losing my other family left me room. Space to breathe. To live without paying affection. To understand that loyalty is not begged and that those who do not appear on your worst day do not deserve to sit at your table when the sun returns.
My son taught me to love. My husband taught me to trust. My family taught me how to close a door without guilt.
And I, finally, learned to stay on the side where there is still peace.



