_healingmyself_
Two women.
Two neighbors.
Two lives unfolding behind adjacent doors.
One is married-to the perfect husband, in the perfect career, inside a perfect home, wrapped in a life that appears flawlessly arranged.
Her smile is practiced. Her routine precise.
Her perfect outfits never wrinkle.
From the outside, her life looks flawless.
But perfection has a way of hiding its cracks.
She has learned how to survive by being exactly what is expected of her.
The other is younger. Louder. Unsteady. Still unfinished. She wears her fractures openly, searching-for a place in the world, for a style that fits, for work that matters, for a future that feels like her own.
She has never learned how to hope for a love that stays.
They share nothing except the same narrow view from their verandas.
They rarely speak, living parallel lives divided by walls and silence.
And yet they watch.
They listen.
They notice the things that shouldn't be seen-the closed curtains, the raised voices, the moments of stillness that linger too long.
What begins as distance slowly becomes awareness. And awareness, once awakened, refuses to look away.
Somewhere between a glance held for a second too long and a conversation that lingers after it should end, something shifts.
What begins as curiosity becomes recognition.
Comfort becomes longing.
The attraction is quiet, confusing, and deeply unwelcome-caught between fear, loyalty, shame, and the weight of an gap neither of them knows how to name.
For one, it feels impossible.
For the other, it feels inevitable.