Tag: dailyprompt-1857

  • The Ghosts of Who We Were 133.2


    The Letter Left Unsent

    He found the note in a drawer he hadn’t opened in years. Folded neatly, yellowed at the edges, the ink slightly smudged as if someone had once held it too tightly. He didn’t need to open it to know what it said.

    He had written it to himself at seventeen. A letter for the future, scrawled in restless handwriting, back when time felt endless and the weight of adulthood was still something he could pretend wasn’t coming.

    He unfolded it anyway.

    “I hope we made it. I hope we figured things out. Tell me—did we become who we wanted to be?”

    The words hit like an old song, the kind that makes you remember too much.

    What would he tell that kid now, all these years later? Would he lie, say that everything turned out fine? That life had a way of making sense?

    Or would he tell the truth?

    That life had been beautiful and brutal in ways he never could have imagined. That some of his dreams had come true, and others had crumbled into dust. That he had learned, slowly and painfully, that the things he once thought mattered—recognition, perfection, proving himself—didn’t mean a damn thing.

    That the real battle was never about becoming someone.

    It was about learning to live with the parts of yourself you couldn’t change.


    Mumbai, The Rain That Never Lets Up

    The city smelled of earth and asphalt, thick with the weight of monsoon air. He ducked into an old Irani café, shaking the water from his sleeves. The place had changed—the wooden chairs replaced with plastic, the walls repainted, but the chai still tasted the same.

    The man behind the counter glanced at him. “You’ve been here before.”

    He nodded. Years ago. A different life. A different version of himself, staring out at the rain, believing in the illusion of control. The tea burned his tongue, just as it always had. Some things change. Others wait for you to return.


    Belgrade, The Apartment That Still Echoes

    The door creaked the same way it used to. He pressed his palm against the peeling paint, letting himself breathe in the musty scent of forgotten time. This was the place where they had spent their summers, where the nights stretched too long and the air hummed with laughter.

    Now it was empty. Just walls and dust and memory. He sat on the floor, the wood still warm beneath his touch.

    He could almost hear their voices. The arguments, the music, the love. The pieces of himself he had left here.

    Some spaces never let go.


    New Orleans, The Song That Follows You

    The bar smelled like bourbon and history. A jazz band played in the corner, the kind of music that made you forget and remember at the same time. He sat at the counter, fingers tracing the rim of his glass, letting the melody settle into his bones.

    A stranger leaned over, nodded toward him. “You look like someone who’s been here before.”

    “I haven’t,” he said. But it wasn’t true. The song, the city, the feeling—it had followed him for years. Maybe in another life, another version of himself, he had sat in this exact seat.

    Some places find you, even when you’re not looking.


    The Note, the Past, the Answer He Already Knew

    He folded the letter, placed it back in the drawer, and closed it without locking it this time.

    Outside, the world moved on—cars rolling by, people talking on the street, a distant laugh echoing down the alley. Life, continuing.

    He didn’t need to write another letter to his future self.

    He already knew what it would say.

    “Keep going. You’re doing just fine.”


  • The Ghosts of Who We Were. 133.1

    A road untraveled—
    Footsteps fading in the wind,
    Would you still take the same path?


    The Letter Left Unsent

    He found the note in a drawer he hadn’t opened in years. Folded neatly, yellowed at the edges, the ink slightly smudged as if someone had once held it too tightly. He didn’t need to open it to know what it said.

    He had written it to himself at seventeen. A letter for the future, scrawled in restless handwriting, back when time felt endless and the weight of adulthood was still something he could pretend wasn’t coming.

    He unfolded it anyway.

    “I hope we made it. I hope we figured things out. Tell me—did we become who we wanted to be?”

    The words hit like an old song, the kind that makes you remember too much.

    What would he tell that kid now, all these years later? Would he lie, say that everything turned out fine? That life had a way of making sense?

    Or would he tell the truth?

    That life had been beautiful and brutal in ways he never could have imagined. That some of his dreams had come true, and others had crumbled into dust. That he had learned, slowly and painfully, that the things he once thought mattered—recognition, perfection, proving himself—didn’t mean a damn thing.

    That the real battle was never about becoming someone.

    It was about learning to live with the parts of yourself you couldn’t change.


    What I Would Tell Him Now

    We like to think of time as a straight line. A past version of us walking forward, evolving, growing, becoming something new. But it’s not.

    Time loops back. The ghosts of who we were never really leave. They linger in half-forgotten memories, in late-night regrets, in the parts of ourselves that still ache for things we lost.

    And maybe that’s why we always feel like we’re running toward something, or running away from it.

    But if I could sit across from him—seventeen, lost, too much fire in his chest and too much fear in his hands—I wouldn’t give him the answers.

    I’d just tell him this:

    • You are not broken. There is nothing wrong with feeling too much or not knowing where you belong. The world will try to fix you, but don’t let it. Some things are meant to stay untamed.
    • No one cares as much as you think they do. The things that keep you up at night—the mistakes, the embarrassments, the failures—will be forgotten by everyone except you. Let them go.
    • You will lose people. Sometimes suddenly, sometimes slowly, sometimes because life is cruel and sometimes because you let them go. It will hurt, but it will not break you.
    • Nothing lasts, and that is not a tragedy. The things you love will change. The things you fear will change. You will change. And that’s the whole point.
    • The only life you will ever have is the one happening right now. Don’t waste it waiting to feel ready. You never will.

    Wabi-Sabi and the Art of Imperfect Time

    Wabi-sabi teaches us that nothing is perfect, nothing is permanent, nothing is finished.

    And maybe that’s the real lesson. That we will never be complete, and that’s okay. That we will always wonder what could have been, and that’s okay. That the version of us from ten years ago would not recognize who we are now, and that is exactly how it’s supposed to be.

    The mistake is thinking that we should have known better.

    But we did the best we could with what we knew.

    And we are still here.

    That has to count for something.


    The Note, the Past, the Answer He Already Knew

    He folded the letter, placed it back in the drawer, and closed it without locking it this time.

    Outside, the world moved on—cars rolling by, people talking on the street, a distant laugh echoing down the alley. Life, continuing.

    He didn’t need to write another letter to his future self.

    He already knew what it would say.

    “Keep going. You’re doing just fine.”

  • The Waiting Rooms of a Life Unlived 132.2

    1. The Man in the Train Station (Tokyo, 1998)
    The clock above the platform read 11:23. Not quite midnight, not quite morning. A liminal hour, caught between days. He sat on a hard plastic bench, staring at the departure board that flickered and hummed, listing trains he would never take.

    Somewhere nearby, a vending machine coughed out a lukewarm can of coffee. The man who bought it didn’t drink it. Just held it, turning it over and over in his hands.

    A woman scrolled through her phone. A businessman clutched a briefcase like a life vest. A teenage boy, earphones in, nodded absently to music that only he could hear.

    They were all waiting.

    For a train. For a signal. For something to tell them what to do next.

    And yet, time refused to move.

    A crow landed on the railing and watched them, head tilted, eyes black as absence.

    2. The Woman in the Apartment (New York, 2023)
    Her phone screen glowed blue against her face in the dark. It was past 2 AM, and she was still scrolling, mindlessly consuming images of other people’s lives, other people’s moments.

    A couple’s vacation in Greece. An old classmate’s wedding. A stranger’s perfect breakfast.

    Outside, the city pulsed. Neon signs flickered. A taxi honked at nothing. But inside, everything was still.

    She exhaled. Closed the app. Stared at the ceiling.

    Boredom wasn’t an absence. It was a presence. A weight pressing down on her chest, whispering: this is not enough.

    The sink dripped. A small sound. A tiny, ceaseless reminder of time passing.

    And yet, she was not moving.

    3. The Old Man by the Sea (Kyushu, 2041)
    The waves crashed in steady rhythm, marking the passage of time in a way clocks never could.

    He watched them, feet in the cold sand, fingers curled around a chipped porcelain cup. The tea inside had long since gone cold. He had let it.

    A lifetime ago, he had sat in a train station, watching the departure board. He had sat in a dark apartment, scrolling through someone else’s moments. He had waited.

    Until, one day, he didn’t.

    It hadn’t been a grand decision. No cinematic moment, no epiphany. Just a quiet, tired kind of knowing. That he had to move. That he had to choose.

    Now, he stood on a shore that had been waiting for him all along. The waves came and went, indifferent and infinite. The sky stretched wide and open.

    He had spent his life chasing something he couldn’t name. And now, in the presence of salt and wind and open water—he understood.

    The waiting had never been about time.
    It had always been about him.

    And so, he let go.

    The cup slipped from his fingers, shattered on the rocks. The ocean took the pieces, carried them away.

    And for the first time in his life, he did not try to hold on.


    The Weight of Empty Time

    Boredom is not an absence. It is a presence.
    The slow erosion of what could have been.
    A waiting room with no exit—until you decide to stand up.

    The Only Lesson Worth Learning

    You will never feel ready. Do it anyway.
    You will never have certainty. Choose anyway.
    You will never be fearless. Move anyway.

    Because the weight of waiting will always be heavier than the fear of stepping through the door.

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    Daily writing prompt
    What advice would you give to your teenage self?