It was one of those easy summer Saturdays—friends, a grill, cheap beer, and music playing from a Bluetooth speaker with a dying battery. He walked up to me with a bottle in one hand and a crooked smile in the other, tilted my sunglasses straight, and said, “You look like you lost a fight with the sun.”
I laughed harder than the joke deserved. By the time the sky turned orange and someone started collecting paper plates, Nick and I were glued together like we’d always been that way.Two years later, we were married in a small ceremony with fairy lights and folding chairs. Three years after that, Emma arrived with a wail that sounded like a battle cry. Lily followed two years later, softer but no less determined. Now they’re seven and five, and if the house ever went silent for more than five minutes, I’d assume something was on fire.
For a while, it felt like we were living the life everyone posts about on social media. A little house, two kids, a dog, bills paid just in time. It wasn’t glamorous, but it was ours.
Then something in Nick started to dim.After Lily was born, it was like a switch flipped in him. At first, it was subtle—less eye contact, fewer jokes, more evenings spent staring at his phone like it held the answers to questions I didn’t know how to ask.
Then the criticism arrived.
If I forgot to take out the trash, he’d sigh and say, “You had all day, Julia. What exactly were you doing?” When the girls left toys scattered around the living room, it became, “You let them walk all over you. No discipline. No structure.” If dinner wasn’t piping hot or I bought the “wrong” detergent, it somehow became proof that I was failing at everything.