In Another Life, Maybe.
Mia Kennedy has lived with the weight of her diagnosis since she was seventeen. The words follow her everywhere, even when she tries to outrun them. Some days she burns bright, too bright, other days she can't get out of bed. She wants love but fears she'll destroy anyone who comes too close. So she writes, she observes, she survives.
Nathaniel Wolfe refuses to give his chaos a name. Married young, now a father, he tells himself he's fine even as his moods swing between wild bursts of energy and silent, suffocating voids. His wife pleads with him to get help, but Nate sees doctors as threats, labels as cages. To admit something is wrong would be to admit he's already lost.
Their stories are separate, yet they echo. A man and a woman carrying storms inside them, trying to build lives around the cracks.
A raw, intimate exploration of mental illness, marriage, loneliness, and the fragile beauty of survival.