10 BEST BOOKS FOR COPING WITH LONELINESS IN A NEW CITY AND BUILDING A LIFE FROM SCRATCH

There is a specific kind of evening I want to tell you about. You finish unpacking the last box — not because you need to, but because looking at it every day.

There is a specific kind of evening I want to tell you about. You finish unpacking the last box — not because you need to, but because looking at it every day.

I want to tell you about the phone call. I was thirty-four, standing in my kitchen in Portland, and my mother was on the other end telling me that my aunt —.

I want to tell you about a morning a few months ago when I couldn't get out of bed. Not because I was tired. Because the anxiety had arrived before I was fully.

There is a specific thing that happens when someone compliments you and for about three seconds you believe it, and then something in your chest contracts and.

There's a particular kind of paralysis that happens after betrayal. Not the clean paralysis of grief, where you know what you lost and you can name it. This is.

There's a particular kind of morning I've learned to recognize. The one where you wake up and before your eyes are fully open, before you've remembered what.

I need to start with something I don't admit often: I used to dread the post-game team.

The rejection letter came on a Tuesday. I know it was a Tuesday because I remember the light through the window of my apartment — that specific late afternoon.

I have a voice in my head that never shuts up. It narrates, critiques, grades, and reviews everything I do from the moment I wake up until I fall asleep, which.

There is a specific kind of confidence that looks calm on the outside but feels like a constant negotiation with yourself on the inside. The confidence to send.