The Life Thrive
I braved the depths of endless seas,
Climbed the peaks of broken dreams,
The weight of sorrow bowed my knees,
A weary heart with silent screams.
You came—a flicker through the haze,
A dream alight in waking skies,
Through winding roads and shadowed maze,
I found the truth within your eyes.
No longer lost, no more alone,
The storms are hushed, the night is past,
Beside your soul I've found my home,
A love unyielding, built to last.
You're not the first, but you're the last,
The flame that heals my shadowed past.
With you, my spirit learns to rise—
In your love, the life thrives.
[…]
I believe in eternal love.
I believe in love that stretches across lifetimes.
I just don't believe it's mine. Never have.
So when his message popped up—
"Babe, do you think we should meet and have dinner tomorrow?"
—I blinked.
Then stared.
Then, very eloquently, thought: OMG. This is real.
[…]
The Beginning
We first met six years ago.
Well—not met met. More like, stumbled across each other on this old-school forum for platonic connections. Back then, the internet still felt quiet. Less curated. Less desperate.
We became pen pals. Digital ones—emails, voice notes, random middle-of-the-night rants about life. Nothing romantic. No drama. Just two people who somehow never ran out of things to say.
I never doubted he was real. I think I trusted him because I met other good people on that site—some of them are still my friends today. Maybe it was timing. Or just gut instinct. Either way, I never questioned him. Not once.
Fast forward to the present:
I was single, a little bruised but functional. My ex had ghosted emotionally long before the breakup. He'd said something like,
"I don't think I ever saw you as a lover."
Lovely, right?
I'd seen it coming, though. I always do.
There's this annoying voice inside that whispers,
It won't last.
So when it fell apart, I didn't fall apart with it.
Then Kaelen messaged me.
Said he was single too. Said he hadn't been with a woman in over a year.
To which I—being me—replied,
We've never even met. We don't know each other."
He disagreed, obviously.
Who says that? We've known each other for six years. I know you."
And then—God help me—he proved it.
Reminded me of our old convos. Quoted lines I didn't remember writing. Sent screenshots of messages I'd forgotten. Even pulled out photos I'd sent him—ones I couldn't believe I'd shared.
One of them stopped me. It was me in front of a mirror—crop top, mini shorts. Casual. Not posed.
This one's my favorite, he said in his message."
I felt seen.
Or maybe I'm just easily swayed.
Either way—I said yes.
The next morning, I woke up to:
Good morning, sayang."
'Sayang' is an endearment use for someone dear in your heart.
I'm not warm by default. Most people think I'm cold.
Quiet. Sharp. Detached.
They're not wrong.
I speak for a living, but I live for silence.
So yes, "sayang" was a little much. But I didn't hate it.
In fact… I smiled.
I replied,
Good morning, Kaelen."
And that's how it started.
A few months of digital affection.
Voice notes. Late-night calls. Random work memes.
Until one night, he just dropped it:
Babe, do you think we should meet and have dinner tomorrow?"
I didn't realize it then, but that message would change everything.