I genuinely hope you build a better life. But whatever we had ended the night you decided my boundaries were negotiable.
I’m not going back to that version of myself.”
He looked like he wanted to argue, then thought better of it. “Okay,” he said quietly.
We stood there for a moment in the broad, brightly lit aisle, surrounded by paint cans and stacks of drop cloths.
Two people who had once shared a bed and a lease and a future, now reduced to a few last sentences between shelves of hardware. “Take care of yourself, Tyler,” I said. “You too,” he replied.
I turned away first.
I didn’t look back. Outside, the American flag over the entrance flapped in the breeze, the sky that relentless Seattle gray‑blue that always looks like it might rain and then doesn’t.
I loaded my supplies into the van, slid behind the wheel, and sat there for a moment with my hands on the steering wheel. I checked in with myself.
No shaking hands.
No racing heart. Just a steady, quiet certainty. Later that evening, I stood in my studio with a paint roller in my hand, music playing low from a little Bluetooth speaker on the counter.
I patched the small cracks in the wall one by one, smoothing the surface, giving the room a fresh coat.
This time, as the paint went on, I realized something simple and powerful:
I wasn’t rebuilding my life around an absence. I was building it around myself.
The woman who knew when to walk away. The woman who didn’t confuse endurance with love.
The woman who understood that there is nothing immature about refusing to stay where your dignity is optional.
By the time I finished, the walls glowed softly in the lamplight, the room smelling faintly of fresh paint and clean beginnings. My phone buzzed. Ava again.
Pool night.
You bringing that new break shot you’ve been working on? On my way, I typed back.
I grabbed my jacket, turned off the lights, and locked the door behind me. Out in the hallway, I caught my reflection in the small security mirror at the end of the corridor.
Same face.
Same eyes. But the woman looking back at me was different. She knew she could survive walking away from a crowded room, from a shared lease, from a man who thought respect was optional as long as the playlist was good and the wine was expensive.
She knew that sometimes the bravest, most mature thing you can do isn’t staying and proving how much you can tolerate.
It’s standing at your own front door, looking someone in the eye, and saying, “He’s yours now,” then choosing yourself and walking away. And never, ever going back.







