Portada Trabajo Universidad ((hot)) <PC LATEST>
It was supposed to be simple. A formality. But the cover page was the first thing Professor Méndez would see. The first judgment .
She thought of her father, a bricklayer who had never set foot in a university. Last week, he had asked, "So you just write your name on a fancy first page, and they give you a degree?" She had laughed, but now the question felt heavy. The portada was a threshold. On one side: the chaos of notes, coffee stains, and 3 a.m. breakthroughs. On the other: the polished lie that everything was under control.
She deleted the template. Instead, she opened a photo she had taken last winter: the university library at dawn, frost on the windows, light spilling from the third floor where she had spent hundreds of hours. She placed it as the background. Over it, she wrote: portada trabajo universidad
Below that, in small letters: Trabajo Final – Sociología . Her name. Her father's name, too, as a dedication she would later erase.
At 8 a.m., she handed the paper to Professor Méndez. He glanced at the cover, then at her. "Interesting choice," he said. "No university seal?" It was supposed to be simple
(The Cost of a Dream)
The cursor blinked on the blank Word document like a metronome counting down to zero. Sofía stared at the white abyss. The research was done—footnotes, bibliography, statistical analysis—but the portada was still empty. The first judgment
"The seal is inside," Sofía replied. And for the first time, she believed it.