When the doctor said “ICU,” everything else became noise.
Machines. Footsteps. People talking around me like I wasn’t even there.
My son—my seven-year-old boy who still slept with a nightlight—lay still under wires and tubes. I held his hand, afraid to blink in case something changed.
That night, sitting in a plastic chair beside his bed, I called my boss.
“I need five days,” I said, my voice steadier than I felt. “My son’s in intensive care after an accident.”
There was a pause.
Then, cool and practiced: “You need to separate work from private life.”
I blinked. “I’m sorry?”
“I can’t approve that kind of time off on such short notice. We have deadlines.”
Deadlines.
I looked at my son’s chest rising unevenly.
“Understood,” I said quietly, and hung up.
The next morning, I kissed my son’s forehead, whispered I’d be back soon—and went to work.
I walked into the office at 9 a.m., dressed neatly, like nothing had happened.
But I wasn’t empty-handed.
Everyone froze when they saw me holding a small hospital bag.
Clear plastic. Inside: a tiny sneaker, scuffed and stained, and a folded hospital wristband.
I placed it on my desk, right in front of my computer.
My boss came out of his office, already frowning. “You’re late to the—”
He stopped mid-sentence when he saw the bag.
“That,” I said calmly, “is what ‘private life’ looks like right now.”
Silence spread across the room.
“I asked for five days,” I continued, my voice steady but firm. “Not a vacation. Not convenience. Five days to sit beside my child while he fights to breathe.”
No one moved.
My boss swallowed, his confidence draining fast. “I… didn’t realize it was that serious.”
I met his eyes. “That’s the problem. You didn’t ask.”
For a moment, I thought he might argue.
Instead, he nodded slowly. “Take the time. As much as you need.”
I didn’t thank him.
I simply picked up the bag, turned around, and walked out.
Three days later, my son opened his eyes.
Two weeks after that, he came home.
Months passed. I returned to work—but things were different. Boundaries were clearer. Priorities, sharper.
And my boss?
He started asking people, “Are you okay?” before asking about deadlines.
One evening, as I tucked my son into bed, he held up his little sneaker—the clean, repaired version of the one from that bag.
“Can I wear these tomorrow?” he asked.
I smiled, my chest finally light again.
“Yeah,” I said. “You can go anywhere in those.”