I spent nearly three decades believing that devotion meant endurance. When Robert was injured after falling from a ladder early in our marriage, I accepted without hesitation that our life would change. Doctors spoke in careful language about nerve damage and chronic pain, and the future suddenly looked smaller and more fragile. I adjusted. I organized medications, learned medical terminology, fought insurance companies, and restructured every corner of my daily life around his needs.
Back then, we had been married only three years. We were still young enough to believe our plans would unfold the way we imagined them. Children, a larger home, a future that felt open and uncomplicated. The accident changed that trajectory overnight. Instead of planning nursery colors or vacations, I became the person who kept track of prescriptions, therapy schedules, and the countless administrative tasks that accompany long-term illness.
People often praised me for my devotion. Friends and family used words like “selfless.” I never saw it that way. To me, it was simply marriage. You choose someone, and you stay.
Over time, Robert’s condition stabilized into what doctors called “manageable.” Some days he used a cane. On worse days he relied on a wheelchair. We installed a stair lift and modified parts of the house to make movement easier. I built my routines around his limitations without really thinking about it. It became our normal.
We never had children. At first we postponed the idea because his recovery was uncertain. Later, when I faced my own health scare and required heart surgery, the possibility quietly disappeared altogether. Robert told me not to worry about the cost of the operation, saying he had received money from an old business settlement. I believed him. After all, he had just saved my life.