I Looked into the mirror and I didnât see meâŠ.
The morning sunlight poured into my small apartment, casting long shadows on the floor. I shuffled into the bathroom, bleary-eyed, and flicked on the light. The mirror greeted me, as it always did, but something was wrong.
It wasnât me staring back.
I froze, gripping the edge of the sink. My face was goneâreplaced by someone elseâs. A stranger. They had the same dark curls, the same faint scar running across their left eyebrow. But their eyes⊠those eyes werenât mine.
They were cold, empty, as if they belonged to someone who had lived through years I hadnât.
âWho are you?â I whispered.
The reflection smirked, a cruel twist of lips that I didnât command.
âWho are you?â it asked back, voice low and mocking.
I stumbled back, heart pounding. This had to be a dream, some bizarre hallucination brought on by too much work and too little sleep. But no amount of blinking or pinching brought my face back.
I turned on the faucet, splashing cold water onto my skin, and dared another glance at the mirror. The stranger was still there, leaning closer now, inspecting me as though I were the one out of place.
âYou donât remember, do you?â they asked, their tone almost pitying.
âRemember what?â My voice cracked.
âThat Iâm whatâs left. The pieces youâve hidden away.â
I shook my head. âNo. Youâre not real. This isâthis is some kind of mental breakââ
The stranger laughed, bitter and sharp. âOh, Iâm real. More real than youâd like to admit. All those times you pretended everything was fine? All the smiles you forced, the truths you buried? You created me.â
I stared at them, my mind racing. Memories Iâd long suppressed began to surfaceâmoments of anger, sadness, and fear that I had locked away, hoping theyâd disappear. I had spent years building walls around them, convincing myself they didnât exist. But now, here they were, staring back at me, undeniable.
âI⊠I didnât mean toâŠâ I whispered.
The reflection softened, their eyes no longer cold but filled with something that looked like understanding.
âItâs not about blame,â they said. âItâs about acknowledgment. You canât move forward if you keep pretending Iâm not here.â
I took a shaky breath, my chest tightening with a mix of fear and relief. âWhat do I do?â
âLook at me,â they said simply. âReally look. Stop hiding.â
So I did. For the first time, I faced the stranger in the mirror. I saw the pain, the anger, the griefâbut I also saw strength, resilience, and hope. They werenât just a stranger. They were a part of me, a part I had neglected for far too long.
As I stared, their features began to shift, subtly at first, then more distinctly. The eyes became my own, the smirk softened into my hesitant smile. The stranger faded, and there I was.
Me.
For the first time in years, I truly saw myself. And I wasnât afraid.
-đŠ©