My parents didn’t just ask me to lose weight for my sister’s wedding.
They demanded it. As if my body was a shame that they needed to erase…
But the moment I finally transformed into the version they thought they wanted, something dark changed in their eyes.
They never expected my brilliance to become the one thing they couldn’t control.
They couldn’t handle it.
And they definitely couldn’t forgive.
My name is Valeria Rivera.
I used to think my biggest problem was my lack of confidence.
Turns out it was my family.
He was 26 years old.
She worked as a junior marketing coordinator in Mexico City.
I lived alone and little by little I learned to feel good about myself.
She wasn’t “thin”, but she was healthy.
Still, for my parents, I was always the “biggest” compared to my younger sister, Camila, the darling of the family.
Camila was committed, radiant.
She was constantly praised for everything she did… even for breathing.
One Saturday, my parents called me for what they said was a “wedding planning talk”.
I should have thought better of it.
As soon as I entered the room, my mother looked me up and down.
As if it were a stain on your carpet.
Then he told me:
—Valeria, Camila’s wedding is in six months. You need to lose weight sooner.
I laughed. I thought he was joking.
But my dad didn’t even blink.
He leaned forward, as if it were a business deal.
—We don’t want you to ruin the photos —he said—. It will be embarrassing. You know how people talk.
I felt my cheeks burn.
“Are you serious?”, I asked, looking at them both.
Camila sat there in silence.
Pretending to be uncomfortable, but not defending myself either.
My mom added:
—We do it for your good. We will pay for a coach. You should be grateful.
I wasn’t grateful.
I was devastated.
But more than that… I was furious.
Not for my body.
But because of how they believed it belonged to them.
I left that day trembling.
And as I was driving home, I cried so much that I had to stop.
But something strange happened after my tears dried.
I started to think:
If I’m going to change something… it will be because I choose it.
So I joined a gym.
Not because my parents embarrassed me, but because I wanted to regain control.
I worked with a coach named Diego.
He didn’t treat me like a project.
He treated me like a person.
I started lifting weights.
To eat better.
To sleep better.
I stopped drinking soda.
I started drinking water… as if my life depended on it.