Choosing Compassion is a reflective work about what happens once we see clearly—and can no longer claim innocence.
Drawing from lived experience as an immigrant, a woman, a mother, and a professional navigating powerful institutions, Mayra Frommelt examines how silence operates not as absence, but as instruction. How language softens harm. How belonging can quietly demand complicity. And how responsibility begins not in public declarations, but in ordinary moments where we decide what we will tolerate, name, or let pass.
This book is not a manifesto or a partisan argument. It is an exploration of dignity, ethics, and moral responsibility in a time when cruelty is often disguised as order and restraint is mistaken for wisdom. Through personal narrative and careful observation, Choosing Compassion asks what compassion truly requires—especially when power, fear, and convenience encourage us to look away.
Written with clarity and restraint, this work invites readers to reflect on what we model for others, what silence teaches, and how choosing humanity—again and again—can become an act of quiet courage.