Join 70,000+ Looksmaxxing Members!

Register a FREE account today to become a member. Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox.

  • DISCLAIMER: DO NOT ATTEMPT TREATMENT WITHOUT LICENCED MEDICAL CONSULTATION AND SUPERVISION

    This is a public discussion forum. The owners, staff, and users of this website ARE NOT engaged in rendering professional services to the individual reader. DO NOT use the content of this website as an alternative to personal examination and advice from licenced healthcare providers. DO NOT begin, delay, or discontinue treatments and/or exercises without licenced medical supervision. Learn more

The Day Nbernical Left

Tart

Custom title
Reputable ★★
Established ★
Joined
Jan 25, 2024
Messages
3,077
Solutions
1
Time Online
12d 17h
Reputation
10,562
Nbernical used to hum when the apartment was quiet. It was never loud—just a low sound, like he was reminding himself he existed. On mornings when the sun came through the cracked blinds, he’d stand in the kitchen holding our child on his hip, swaying like the world might fall apart if he stopped moving.


Then one morning, he didn’t hum.


I woke up to the sound of silence pressing too hard against the walls. His side of the bed was cold, folded in on itself like it had already accepted he wasn’t coming back. On the table, there was no note—just his keys, placed carefully, as if that small order could undo the chaos he left behind.


Our child cried for him that afternoon. Not with words, not yet—just with that sharp, confused sound that asks where did the warmth go? I held them close and told them stories about a man who loved once, who tried once, who didn’t know how to stay.


Days passed. I learned the weight of doing everything alone: carrying groceries with one arm, carrying grief with the other. I learned how absence can be louder than anger, how love can still ache even after it’s abandoned you.


Sometimes, when night settles in and the city goes quiet, I swear I hear humming again. It’s not Nbernical—it’s me. I hum for our child now. I hum because staying is an act of courage. I hum because even though he left, something stronger remained.


And every day, I choose to be the person who didn’t walk away.
 
Register to hide this ad

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top