Subtitle: She wasn't snooping—at least not at first. She had been searching for paperwork, something ordinary that might explain my father's recent absences and strange behavior. Instead, she opened a drawer she had never touched before and found something that unsettled her instantly.
Let me tell you about the day my mother discovered my father's secret.
It was a quiet afternoon. My mother was looking for some old bank statements, something she needed to sort out a financial issue. My father had been acting strange lately—distant, distracted, disappearing for hours at a time.
She opened a drawer in his study that she'd never looked in before. Inside, she found a small locked box.
She didn't know what it was. She didn't know what was inside. But something told her it was important.
The Box
She found the key hidden in a book. She opened the box. Inside, there were letters, documents, and a few small photographs. She sat down and began to read.
The moment she saw it, a familiar fear surfaced—one she had carried silently for years without ever naming. Nothing had ever been said aloud. There were no accusations. No reports. No confrontations. Only small observations that never quite fit together: the way my father withdrew into himself whenever he handled his "things," how the color drained from his face, how his posture folded inward, as though he were only half-present—like someone performing a ritual he no longer understood but could not stop repeating.
She discovered that my father had been battling a profound depression for years—a mental illness he'd been hiding from everyone. The letters were from a therapist he'd been seeing secretly. The documents were medical records.
He'd been struggling alone.
The Secret
My father had been suffering from clinical depression for over a decade. He had been hiding it from my mother, from me, from everyone. He hadn't wanted to be a burden. He hadn't wanted to seem weak. He'd tried to handle it on his own.
He had been seeing a therapist in secret. He had been taking medication. He had been fighting a quiet, private battle.

