Mis Dos Vidas -

The tragedy of “mis dos vidas” is that these two people rarely meet. The home self does not understand the exhaustion of code-switching. The public self does not understand the ache of a song from childhood. Society loves the narrative of the bilingual hero—the person who translates documents at a wedding, who negotiates a business deal in two languages, who effortlessly switches from tú to you without blinking. We call them bridges.

You are not fragmented. You are complete. Mis dos vidas

We often think of “living a double life” as something secretive, negative, or deceptive. But for millions of people around the world—immigrants, first-generation children, expats, and bicultural individuals—having two lives is not a betrayal of the self. It is an expansion of it. To understand “mis dos vidas,” you must stop thinking geographically. These two lives are not usually divided between a "before" country and an "after" country. Instead, they coexist in the same moment. The tragedy of “mis dos vidas” is that