My husband grew silent after he picked up his new “hobby.” Whenever I inquired about it, he’d simply call it “freeing.” I began to notice crimson marks on his clothing when he came back from the workshop. Curiosity led me to follow him one day. Stepping inside, I stopped in my tracks, seeing him surrounded by a small crowd, his hands coated in clay and splattered with red paint. He wasn’t concealing anything sinister—he had joined an art therapy group. The stains that had troubled me were merely remnants of paint and clay from their creations.
When he spotted me at the entrance, his eyes grew wide with surprise. “I didn’t share this with you because… I felt shy,” he admitted. “Work has been heavy, and this place lets me feel unburdened. Shaping something with my hands—it gives me room to breathe.”
Relief washed over me, though guilt for my doubts lingered. I sat quietly, observing as he shaped a mound of clay into a bowl, his tension easing with each motion. The group’s mutual support showed this was more than art—it was about renewal. On the ride home, he reached for my hand. “I thought you’d see this as a waste of time,” he said.
I smiled, my eyes misty. “Anything that brings you calm is never a waste. I’m so proud of you.” Since that day, I’ve accompanied him to the workshop a few times. Watching him craft, witnessing his quiet happiness, taught me that the secrets we fear are often not betrayals—but hidden pieces of the heart, yearning for light.