Charcoal sketch inspired by Liu Xiaodong I remember a conversation clearly. Not because it happened, but because it didn’t. And if you’re honest, you have one too. The one that sat in your chest longer than it should have. The one you rehearsed in your head—perfectly, eloquently, courageously, but never actually said. The one that, if you had it earlier, would have changed everything. I could feel it building. Something was off. No argument had occurred. No major disagreement. No visible breakdown. Yet something had shifted. Words had gone unsaid. Tone had shifted—slightly. Energy had shifted just enough to feel it. You know that feeling. Everything looks normal. But nothing feels normal. Instead of leaning into it, I did what many intelligent, ‘self-aware’, emotionally “mature” people do. I justified my silence. “This is not the right time.” “I don’t want to create tension.” “It’s not that serious.” “Let me think about it first.” Let me say this: Most relationship dam...
Charcoal sketch inspired by Liu Xiaodong There is a kind of honesty that only shows up when the noise dies. Not when you’re busy. Not when you’re productive. Not when life is moving. But when everything slows down. And it’s just you. For me, it was late—the kind of late when even your excuses are tired. The house is quiet. The world has gone to sleep, and you are left alone with your patterns. I was sitting there. Phone in hand. Scrolling. Nothing engaging. I wasn’t learning, and I wasn’t even enjoying it. Just scrolling. Unable to shift from this action. Five minutes became fifteen. Fifteen became forty-five. And then that dangerous sentence showed up: “Just one more video.” You know that one. It has destroyed more dreams than failure ever has. By the time I looked up, an hour had passed. Gone. Evaporated. And then something in me paused. Like a frozen moment in time. Not dramatically. Not like a lightning bolt. But deeply. I asked myself a question that felt uncom...