I left my home at 18. My twin sister stayed for our ill mom. She asked me to visit, but I’d say, “I’m busy becoming someone! Not empty like you!” For years, I believed success only lived outside our small town, far from the quiet life my sister chose. She spent her days caring for Mom, while I chased opportunities, convinced that love and responsibility could wait.
Two years later, Mom died. I arrived late and didn’t get to say goodbye. My footsteps echoed through our childhood home as guilt pressed on my chest. When I saw my sister, she looked exhausted — not just physically, but in a way that comes from carrying heavy emotional weight alone. And yet, she didn’t look at me with anger. She simply looked tired, like she had given every piece of herself without asking for anything in return.
