The cold that night cut through everything—layers of wool, habit, and exhaustion. It was the kind of winter chill that makes an already long workday feel even heavier. I had just finished another late shift at the sporting goods store where I’d worked for almost twenty years. After seventeen years of marriage, raising two teenagers, and living inside a constant loop of responsibility, I thought I understood how life worked. That certainty unraveled somewhere between the bus stop and a small shawarma stand glowing beneath flickering streetlights.
The day had been draining in quiet, cumulative ways. Holiday shoppers argued over refunds for equipment they’d clearly used. One register jammed again and again. My daughter had texted me about failing yet another math test, and my mind immediately started recalculating tutoring costs, budgets, and priorities. The temperature had fallen well below freezing, and the wind whipped through the streets, pushing scraps of paper along the sidewalk like reminders of everything unfinished.