The Other Side Of The Story
  • Reads 3
  • Votes 2
  • Parts 3
  • Time 30m
  • Reads 3
  • Votes 2
  • Parts 3
  • Time 30m
Ongoing, First published Mar 11, 2017
I've had enough dose of dramas to know how can one story be so biased when focused on one's point of view. We only see what's happening when the actor/actress is present but have you ever consider a bigger picture outside each scene? Like how the leading man really reacts after ignoring his leading lady when no one is around to judge his reactions. Same goes in stories written of course. The more I read books and watch movies, the more I get confused on what to feel. Should I be happy from the happy ending the protagonists get after suffering and all? Or should I be heartbroken because of the unsaid feelings and unseen acts hidden each time we focused on something we thought was all that matter? -Margaret Chance
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Ella is falling apart trying to live a "perfect" high school life. Then she meets Ren, who can see past her scars. Suddenly perfection isn't her only option. ***** Ella Volkov is a gifted music student, but she's depressed and starting to crack under the pressure of high school. Her overbearing father won't even let her choose what instrument she plays. Then she finds herself alone at a party with Ren, her best friend's crush. She'd always thought he was rude, but after that night he's all Ella can think about. Now she's trapped. If Ella dates Ren, it will ruin her friendship with Jenny. But if she stays true to Jenny, she's losing the one person who can see past her scars. It's up to Ella to decide if she will forge her own path, or stay in the "perfect" box designed for her... Content and/or Trigger Warning: depression, anxiety, self-harm, violence, sexual assault. [[word count: 50,000-100,000 words]]