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Brazil: Being the Family’s Strong One Becomes a Trap

Ernest Hemingway once wrote, “The world breaks everyone, and afterward, many are strong at the broken places.” For one woman, that strength became a trap that took decades to escape. It started in an elevator. Her grandmother had just died. She and her sister left the room where the body lay and sto

Por WTW19 · · 7 min de leitura
Brazil: Being the Family’s Strong One Becomes a Trap

Ernest Hemingway once wrote, “The world breaks everyone, and afterward, many are strong at the broken places.” For one woman, that strength became a trap that took decades to escape.

It started in an elevator. Her grandmother had just died. She and her sister left the room where the body lay and stood in silence as the doors closed. Her sister turned and said, “Now you’re the last strong one in this family.” The words felt comforting at first. She felt proud. Then her stomach clenched. She wanted to stop the elevator, run away, never look back. Her sister had not told her anything new. She had only given words to something the woman had known for a long time. Some part of her wanted out. But she did not know how.

To understand why those words hit so hard, you have to go back to a hallway. She was six or seven years old, standing outside her mother’s room. Her mother had returned from a psychiatric hospital a few months earlier. The woman had waited for that return. She had pictured life going back to normal, even though by then she had forgotten what normal looked like.

Her mother came home and closed the door. Behind it, the mother was writing a novel on a typewriter. The girl knocked politely. She had already learned to be polite about her own needs. The answer came quickly: “No. Don’t disturb me.” She recognized the tone. She had heard it before, when her mother told her she was “too much.” So she left. She did not remember feeling angry. She remembered feeling like she understood. It made sense that the door was closed. The right response was to take care of herself and not ask again. That decision, made in a hallway at age six or seven, became the blueprint for the next four decades of her life.

Her mother’s absence had started earlier. Before the hospitalization, the girl mostly remembered waiting for her mother to make time for her. She remembered being told to stop crying because it was too much. Being accused of stealing a ring she did not take. Her mother yelling at her father that the girl was too strong-willed and could not be dealt with anymore. Those were signs of a woman about to break down under the weight of her own psyche, but the girl did not understand then.

When she was about five, her mother was committed to a psychiatric hospital with severe psychosis. The woman does not remember much from those days. Her sister had been born a few months before. Her grandmother appeared at school to take her away. Her grandparents took her and her baby sister in. Suddenly she was in a different city, a different school, with no friends. Something in her must have decided then that she was, in some essential way, on her own.

When her mother came back, the girl wanted to believe things would be different. The closed door told her they were not. So she became useful. She took care of her little sister. She kept an eye on her father. She monitored the atmosphere in their home like a small meteorologist watching weather. Always scanning. Always adjusting. Always making sure nobody would need to worry about her because she was already worrying about everything else.

Later, after her parents divorced and her mother settled elsewhere, she took care of her too. Every two weeks, she traveled with her sister by train to visit. Never knowing what to expect. Carefully checking for signs of a manic episode. Walking on eggshells not to trigger her mother. When she decided at age 14 not to visit anymore, she kept track of her mother from a distance, over the phone. For years. She cannot remember ever being anything other than a mother to her own mother. Never a daughter.

Being strong for everyone did not feel like something she had to do. She thought of it as who she was. It felt like a necessary job, but one that came with a strange sense of safety. As long as she was the one holding things together, there was a role for her. A reason to be needed. And being needed felt, honestly, a lot like being loved.

What she did not understand then, and what took decades to see clearly, is that she had built a prison inside it. Deep down she believed that if she stopped being strong, everything would fall apart. Not just for the people around her. For her too. Because who would be there to catch her? She had decided, at six years old, standing in that hallway, that the answer was no one.

So she kept going. The wish to be useful and remarkable pushed her through life. She worked two decades as a professional actor. Went back to study and earned a PhD at 45. Started a new career at a university. Got married, had two children. A life that looked from the outside like someone who had it all together. And in many ways, she did. But she was also the person who answered every call, who showed up when asked, who said yes before checking whether she had anything left to give.

The body keeps score. Hers kept very careful records.

Years later, her sister was going through a hard time. Whatever was going on in her own life dropped to the background. One clear focus: the strong one switching on. But this time her body pushed back. She felt suddenly cold to the bone. Her head started spinning. Nausea. Even if she wanted to spring into action, she could not. She lay in bed for hours, not because she decided to rest, but because she had no other option. Under the blankets, trying to get warm, something shifted. Her body had made the decision her mind could not make. It had said, “Not today.” For the first time, she let that be enough. It felt like relief. The next day, she discovered her sister had managed without her.

The real turning point came on a vacation. Her mother called. She wanted her daughter to come over as soon as she got back and “finally” take care of her. She listed things she expected, things daughters did. When the woman tried to hold her off, her mother told stories about other people’s daughters who did those things. Then, suddenly, the woman said calmly, almost surprising herself: “I’m not like that.”

She knew, as she said it, that it was not true in the way her mother meant it. She had been exactly like that for decades. She had called every day for years, just to let her mother vent. She had watched for signs her mother might need to be hospitalized. She had been, in many ways, more of a parent than a child. But she also knew that what she said was true in the way that mattered to her. She was no longer going to prove otherwise. Not today. Not for this. She hung up and felt something new: relief. The relief of setting something down.

What she has come to understand, slowly and imperfectly, is this: Being strong was not only imposed on her. She chose it too. It gave her something she desperately needed: a role, a sense of security, a way to stay close to people she loved without risking the kind of vulnerability that had already cost her so much. Seeing that clearly, without blame and without shame, was the most important part of changing it.

The process since then has not been about becoming less strong. She is still strong. That is genuinely part of who she is. What has changed is what the strength is for. It no longer has to be the price she pays for belonging. It no longer has to prove she deserves her place.

What she is learning instead is this: She can be present with people she loves without taking over their struggle. She can let someone she cares about sit with something hard without rushing in to fix it. She can trust that they are capable, that her absence from the role of rescuer is not the same as abandonment. And slowly, in the space that opens up when she stops managing everything, she is discovering something unexpected. There is room, finally, for someone to ask how she is doing. And room, for the first time, to actually answer.

The decision she made in front of that closed door was not wrong. It was the best a six-year-old could do with what she had. But it did not have to last a lifetime.

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