I never forgave my twin brother for abandoning me for six minutes in our mother’s womb, leaving me there alone, terrified in the dark, floating like an astronaut in that silent space, while kisses rained down on him from the other side.
Those were the longest six minutes of my life the minutes that made him the firstborn, the favored one.
Ever since, I raced to be first: out of the room, out of the house, to school, to the cinema even if it meant missing the end of the movie.
Then one day, I got distracted, and he stepped out to the street before me. Smiling that gentle smile, he was struck by a car.
I remember my mother how she rushed from the house at the sound of the impact, how she passed by me, arms outstretched toward his lifeless body, but she screamed my name.
To this day, I’ve never corrected her mistake.
It was I who died, and he who lived.
Sometimes grief chooses the wrong name. And sometimes, we let it.