I met Eric when I was just twenty years old, fresh out of community college and eager to build a future. We worked in the same office—an insurance agency in our small hometown—and our early connection felt effortless. He was six years older than me, but that gap never seemed relevant back then. He had a dry sense of humor that made me laugh, a dependable paycheck, and a laid-back attitude that initially drew me in. It helped that everyone around us praised him as a reliable, stable man.
We dated for two years, a whirlwind romance of quiet dinners and weekends spent watching movies on the couch. At twenty-two, I decided we might as well make it official. My parents, who were traditional and believed in early marriage, approved wholeheartedly. Eric proposed with a modest diamond ring, and I accepted with genuine hope for a stable, loving future.
The first few months of marriage were blissful in that newlywed way—sharing each other’s space, combining finances, making grand plans. I remember dreaming about the family we’d build. Children were always on the table, though we never hashed out how we’d split responsibilities. I assumed that if we both worked, we’d both help around the house. Life rarely works out exactly as one expects.
I turned twenty-three shortly after we married. Not long after, we discovered I was pregnant. It felt like a miracle, though we hadn’t planned on it so soon. We were both thrilled in that naive, brand-new-parents way. Neither of us had any real sense of what parenthood would demand.
My pregnancy with Lily was relatively smooth. I cut back my hours at the insurance agency because morning sickness and fatigue took a toll. Eric didn’t object. In fact, he encouraged me to quit altogether so I could “focus on the baby.” Back then, I read his suggestion as support. It never crossed my mind that it might lay the groundwork for a major imbalance in our future roles. It seemed like the natural next step: him working full-time, me taking care of our daughter and the house.