I used to believe grief had a sound. Crying. Breaking. Screaming into the dark. When my husband didn’t do any of those things, I assumed he wasn’t hurting the way I was. I didn’t understand then that pain doesn’t always announce itself. Sometimes it moves in silence, settles into routine, and survives by becoming invisible.
After we lost our child, I watched myself unravel while he seemed to harden. He went to work every day. He fixed things around the house. He answered questions with short sentences and avoided rooms that held too many memories. I told myself he was avoiding the pain — or worse, avoiding me. What I didn’t see was that he was carrying it differently, locking it away so it wouldn’t crush us both.
Years later, long after our lives had gone separate ways, the truth found me in the smallest of places. A story shared. A habit explained. A detail that finally made sense. He had found private spaces to grieve — moments where no one could watch him fall apart. He believed that if he stayed standing, I might too.
That realization didn’t erase the years we lost, but it softened them. It taught me something grief never had before: strength and love don’t always look the way we expect. Some people mourn loudly. Others mourn by surviving.
I no longer think silence means absence. Sometimes, it means someone is holding everything together with trembling hands — and choosing love over collapse.