Nolan stared at the floor before finally speaking. Rachel was not his lover. She was a grief therapist hired by his company after one of their employees took his own life. Nolan had joined a private program for men who struggled to express emotion, but he had been too ashamed to tell me.
The sessions were part of a paid research project. Participants received money for recording honest conversations about loss, fear, and childhood trauma. Nolan admitted that the first time he cried was while speaking about his father, a man who had taught him that tears were a sign of weakness.
One afternoon, Nolan had taken Ivy with him because our babysitter canceled. She sat outside the recording room with Rachel and saw her hand Nolan an envelope afterward. When Ivy asked what it was, he jokingly called it “crying money” and made her promise not to tell me.
His anger in the parking lot had not come from guilt about another woman. It came from humiliation. He believed I would see him differently if I knew he cried in front of strangers for money. Instead, I was hurt that he had carried so much pain alone.
That evening, Nolan went upstairs and apologized to Ivy for frightening her. Then he sat beside me and cried without hiding his face. For the first time in our marriage, I realized his silence had never meant he felt nothing. It meant he had spent his entire life believing he was not allowed to show it.
