Sometimes it arrives as responsibility.
After my mother died, the world did not slow down.
It narrowed.
Every adult conversation eventually circled back to the same sentence:
“You have to be strong.”
“You’re the hope of the family.”
“You’ll become a doctor. Just like we always said.”
They spoke as if repeating it enough times would turn it into armor.
I nodded.
That’s what good children do.
In our family, being a doctor wasn’t a dream.
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It was a promise made before I could speak.
A role assigned, not chosen.
Study.
Obey.
Don’t fail.
I was raised to be well-fed, well-dressed, well-educated
and completely unprepared for real life.
No one taught me how to cook.
How to decide.
How to fall and stand up again.
I was protected from hardship so thoroughly
that hardship became fatal when it finally arrived.
School became my entire identity.
Grades were the only language adults listened to.
Praise arrived only when numbers were high.
When I succeeded, I was invisible.
When I hesitated, I was a disappointment.
I learned to fear mistakes more than I learned to love learning.
At night, I stared at textbooks that felt heavier than they should.
Not because they were difficult—
but because they carried the weight of an entire lineage.
I wasn’t studying medicine.
I was carrying a future that didn’t belong to me.
And the most dangerous part?
I believed that if I failed,
I wouldn’t just disappoint them—
I would lose the right to exist.
That was the moment expectation stopped being guidance
and became a cage.
One I would spend years
convincing myself
was safety.

