When childhood promises become prisons, how do we break free? Explore the hidden burdens and invisible contracts that shape our most painful connections.

Loyalties are silent fidelities or contracts we make with ourselves, often without even realizing it; they are both our wings and our yokes, the things that give us strength to resist but also the trenches where we bury our dreams.
Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
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Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско

Lena: You know, Miles, I was thinking about those invisible threads that connect us to the people in our lives—the ones Delphine de Vigan calls "loyalties." It’s such a beautiful word, but in her 2018 novel, it actually feels quite heavy, doesn't it?
Miles: Exactly. She describes them as silent fidelities or contracts we make with ourselves, often without even realizing it. It’s that "pact of silence" children sometimes enter to protect their parents, even when it’s hurting them.
Lena: Right, like twelve-year-old Théo. He’s caught in this bitter divorce, literally "shredded" between a mother fueled by hatred and a father who’s spiraling into a deep depression. It’s heartbreaking because he starts drinking just to find a moment of unconsciousness—to stop that "high-pitched noise" only he can hear.
Miles: It’s a chilling look at how childhood promises can become prisons. We’re going to look at how these four characters—Théo, his friend Mathis, his teacher Hélène, and Mathis’s mother Cécile—are all struggling with their own hidden burdens. Let’s dive into how these invisible links can lead to such dangerous territory.