“I hurt so much… Dad.”
The words came out broken, barely holding together — and they shattered everyone who heard them.
In the wake of Yeison Jiménez’s passing, it was not a public statement or a formal tribute that struck deepest, but the raw grief of a child who had just lost the man she called her father.
For Camila, he was not a stepfather in title.
He was simply “Dad.”
And now, he is gone.

A Loss That Cannot Be Explained to a Child
Death is difficult to process at any age. But for a child, it arrives without language — without logic strong enough to contain the pain.
Camila’s reaction, captured through trembling words and quiet sobs, revealed a truth often overlooked in public tragedies: the most devastating grief belongs to those who do not yet have the tools to carry it.
“I hurt so much,” she said again.
There was no performance. No awareness of cameras or audience. Just a child trying to make sense of an absence that feels impossible.
More Than a Stepfather
Those close to the family say Yeison Jiménez never treated Camila as anything other than his own daughter.
He attended to her milestones. He listened to her stories. He showed up — consistently, quietly, without condition.
“He chose her,” one family friend said. “And she chose him right back.”
In blended families, love is not automatic. It is built. And in this case, it was built patiently, day by day, until the distinction between “step” and “father” disappeared entirely.
To Camila, he was safety.
He was routine.
He was the voice that answered when she called “Dad.”
Memories That Now Hurt to Touch
In the days following his death, Camila returned to videos and photos — moments frozen in time.
Smiles that once brought comfort now reopen wounds.
Stories that once made her laugh now leave her breathless with longing.
Every memory is both a gift and a burden.
“She watches them over and over,” a relative said quietly. “As if somehow he might move again.”
This is the paradox of grief: memory is all that remains — and yet memory is what hurts most.
When Grief Grows in Silence
Unlike adults, children often grieve quietly.
Camila does not have the words to articulate loss in complex terms. Instead, grief follows her like a shadow — heavy, constant, and silent.
It shows up in pauses.
In questions that trail off.
In moments where she reaches for something that is no longer there.
Psychologists say this kind of grief does not fade quickly. It evolves.
“It grows with them,” one expert explained. “Each new stage of life reintroduces the loss.”
Camila will grieve Yeison Jiménez not once — but many times.
A Void Nothing Can Fill
For fans, Jiménez’s passing left a silence in music. For his family, it left a silence in daily life.
For Camila, it left a void where a father once stood.
There is no replacement for that role. No substitute for the man who showed her she was chosen, loved, and protected.
“He was her anchor,” one close acquaintance said. “And anchors don’t get replaced.”
Public Loss, Private Pain
As tributes poured in from fans around the world, the family faced a difficult dual reality: mourning privately while being watched publicly.
Camila’s grief did not ask to be seen. It simply spilled out.
And when it did, it reminded everyone that behind every public figure is a private family — and behind every loss is a child trying to breathe through the pain.
“Dad” Is a Forever Word
Perhaps the most heartbreaking detail is the name Camila continues to use.
She does not say his full name.
She does not say “my stepfather.”
She says “Dad.”
That word does not expire with death.
It carries forward — into memories, dreams, and the quiet moments when she wishes she could still hear his voice.
“I hurt so much, Dad,” she said.
And in those four words, an entire world collapsed.
The Long Road Ahead
Grief does not resolve. It rearranges.
Camila will grow older. She will learn new things. She will laugh again.
But there will always be moments when she wishes he were there — to see, to hear, to guide.
Birthdays. Achievements. Ordinary days that suddenly feel incomplete.
Each milestone will carry his absence alongside it.
What Remains Now
What remains is love — unchanged, undiminished, and unbearably present.
What remains are memories that will one day bring more warmth than pain, even if today they cut deeply.
And what remains is a child who lost a father far too soon — a loss that will shape her life in ways no headline can measure.
A Pain Shared by Many
Fans may mourn the artist.
The world may mourn the voice.
But Camila mourns the man who held her hand, listened to her fears, and called her his daughter.
Her grief is not symbolic.
It is personal.
And it is real.
“I hurt so much, Dad.”
Some losses are too heavy for words.
And yet, somehow, she found the only ones that mattered.