Sleep
Dr. Felipe Guerrero believed he could change minds. As a psychologist in Quito, his mission was to weave resilience into the city’s fabric, one client, one workshop, one late-night crisis call at a time. He poured himself into the work, fueled by tinto coffee and a conviction that if he just worked harder, he could mend more. But the minds were heavy. The collective anxiety of the city seeped into his bones. He began trading sleep for strategy, his own rest sacrificed on the altar of others’ peace. The caffeine curfew became a myth; his bedroom, an extension of his office, lit by the blue glow of a screen drafting one more mental health resource. He wore his exhaustion like a badge of honor, a proof of his commitment. Until he cracked. It wasn’t dramatic. It was a fog, like a thick, persistent haze where his sharp insights blurred and his empathy frayed into irritation. He was trying to pour from an empty cup, and the drought was showing. The turning point was a quiet observation ...