How to Walk Away
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Read between December 26 - December 28, 2024
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clouds actually sit on columns of rising air, and that turbulence happens when you cut through those columns.
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My mom had a remarkable talent for making things worse.
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I hadn’t died, I kept telling myself. But what if this was worse?
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You can’t ask someone to love you or be there for you or do the right thing—and you certainly can’t guilt them into it. Either they will or they won’t.
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“I’m Ian Moffat. Your physical therapist.”
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I’m Scottish.”
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twenty-eight
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candidate.”
Sharon Skoll
Her BF?
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resentment.
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“And that was the moment when I knew for sure. Our dad is not my father.”
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“I was an ‘unfortunate accident.’ With someone who was not Dad.”
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Keep in mind that the struggle makes her stronger.”
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Ian began his lesson, but I didn’t even listen. I was too busy trying to catch another whiff of him.
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“It’s the trying that heals you. That’s all you have to do. Just try.”
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I had to see what I wanted. I had to want what I wanted. I had to create a vision to move toward.
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“I want to marry you, Margaret. But I think I can’t.”
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“I think,” he went on, “in the end, you’re not going to let me.”
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“I really, really need you,” I said, “to get me the hell out of here.”
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It hit me out on that roof for the first time. I was alive.
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Staying hopeful was exhausting.
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Somehow, the presence of Chip in that recovery fantasy had been the lynchpin holding it all together. Without him, the whole thing fell apart.
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But let’s be clear: I had nothing—nothing—to look forward to.
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My mother was always very helpful—when you did exactly what she wanted.
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“I have to figure this out,” I said, my voice a little softer as I looked over at my dad. “You can’t do it for me. I have to do it myself.”
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This might have been the first time in my life that I did something difficult not for how it would matter to somebody else, but for how it would matter to me.
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“As good as it feels to win a battle, I want you to win the war.”
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‘Our struggles lead us to our strengths.’”
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“I will think about you after you’re gone. I expect I’ll think about you often.”
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‘When you don’t know what to do for yourself, do something for someone else.’”
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“No. Your Scottish boyfriend.”
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Sexual tension is my primary language!”
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I did believe in fun when Ian was around.
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I liked driving him crazy.
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sometimes Ian seemed like a different guy entirely. An easygoing, smiley, likable guy.
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“I hate everybody,” he said. “Except you.”
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“And that’s another reason you’re not safe.”
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Maybe he was so lonely, any live girl would do—even a broken one like me.
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“How does he look at me?” “Like you’re a waterfall in a desert.”
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“What restraint at what lake?”
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“When he wasn’t standing outside your room listening to you sing.”
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it truly hit me: I wasn’t going to walk again. I really wasn’t.
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The only thing that was real anymore: I was going to spend the rest of my life in a wheelchair.
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There was no hope anymore.
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As sad as I was, I felt a little happy, too.
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“His name,” she said, “was Derin Buruk.”
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“He was Turkish. An exchange student.
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“I came back to get the car keys. But I found myself eavesdropping instead.”
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I said, “Marry me.”
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Plus, and this is not a minor point, I was utterly, breath-stealingly in love with him.
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“Ian,” I said then, my breath swirling cold in my lungs like water. “The thing is, I’m in love with you.”
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