My twin sister was beaten wrk daily by her abusive husband. My sister and I switched identities and made her husband repent for his actions.

My twin sister was beaten wrk daily by her abusive husband. My sister and I switched identities and made her husband repent for his actions.

My twin sister was beaten daily by her abusive husband. My sister and I switched identities and made her husband repent for his actions.

My name is Nayeli Cárdenas. My twin sister’s name is Lidia. We were born identical, but life insisted on treating us as if we were made for opposite worlds.

For ten years I lived locked up in the San Gabriel Psychiatric Hospital, on the outskirts of Toluca. Lidia spent those same ten years trying to hold on to a life that was falling apart in her hands.

The doctors said I had an impulse control disorder. They used long words: unstable, unpredictable, volatile. I preferred a simpler truth: I always felt everything too intensely. Joy burned in my chest. Rage clouded my vision. Fear made my hands tremble as if another person lived inside me—a fiercer, faster person, less willing to tolerate the cruelty of the world.

It was that fury that brought me here.


When I was sixteen, I saw a boy drag Lidia by the hair into an alley behind the high school. The next thing I remember is the sharp sound of a chair breaking against an arm, her screams, and the horrified faces of the people. No one looked at what he was doing. They all looked at me. The monster, they said. The crazy one. The dangerous one.

My parents were afraid. So was the town. And when fear rules, compassion usually takes a back seat. I was committed “for my own good” and “for the safety of others.” Ten years is a long time to live behind white walls and bars. I learned to control my breathing, to train my body until the fire became discipline. I did push-ups, pull-ups, sit-ups—anything to keep the rage from consuming me. My body became the only thing no one could control: strong, firm, obedient only to me.

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