Then She Was Gone
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Read between March 28 - April 26, 2025
6%
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All those hopes and dreams and talk of ballerinas and pop stars, concert pianists and boundary-breaking scientists. They all ended up in an office. All of them.
9%
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May was like the Friday night of summer: all the good times lying ahead of you, bright and shiny and waiting to be lived.
11%
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The blame game could be exhausting sometimes. The blame game could make you lose your mind… all the infinitesimal outcomes, each path breaking up into a million other paths every time you heedlessly chose one, taking you on a journey that you’d never find your way back from.
25%
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But she is remembering now. Cooking doesn’t just nurture the recipient; it nurtures the chef.
27%
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I will never guilt trip my children when they are adults, she’d vowed. I will never expect more than they are able to give.
33%
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“Stories,” she says, “are the only thing in this world that are real. Everything else is just a dream.” Laurel and Paul smile and nod. Then they turn to each other and exchange a look. Not a wry look this time, but one of disquiet.
34%
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Ellie used to read two books a week and when they teased her about always having her nose in a book, Ellie used to say, “When I read a book it feels like real life and when I put the book down it’s like I go back into the dream.”
40%
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I remember being twenty-one and thinking that my personality was a solid thing, that me was set in stone, that I would always feel what I felt and believe what I believed. But now I know that me is fluid and shape-changing. So whatever you’re feeling now, it’s temporary.
82%
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“I mean,” says Blue, “that a man who can’t love but desperately needs to be loved is a dangerous thing indeed.