



Exactly two weeks apart. Thatās all it took for everything to changeātwice. What started as one of the happiest days of my life was followed by one of the hardest. Life has a way of teaching you lessons in pairs: joy and sorrow, hope and heartache, beginnings and endings. And in my case, they came exactly two weeks apart.
Two weeks ago, I was beaming. My heart was light, and the air felt different. It was the kind of day where the sky looked bluer, songs sounded sweeter, and time moved just a little slower so you could enjoy every second. I had finally told her how I felt. After monthsāmaybe even yearsāof holding it all in, I had the courage to say it: āI love you.ā And she said it back. That moment, that connection, felt like the start of something truly beautiful. Angel girl so cute šš Love this feeling, love this moment, love this life youāre building ā together.
We laughed about how long it took us to get here. We made plans. Not the big kind, like moving in or getting marriedājust simple things, like going to the lake next weekend, watching old movies, trying that new dessert place downtown. Everything felt easy. Natural. Right. I started to believe that maybe, finally, the universe was giving me something good without trying to take it away.
But then, exactly two weeks later, the call came. I still remember the timestamp. 3:47 PM. Her best friendās name lit up on my screen, and in that split second, my heart sank before I even answered. You know when you just know somethingās wrong? Thatās how it felt.
She was gone.
A car accident. No pain, they said. Quick. But I didnāt care about the details. My brain couldnāt process anything beyond the simple, brutal truth: she wasnāt coming back. The girl I just started loving, the one who brought sunshine into my world, was suddenly not here. And all I could think about was how it had only been two weeks. Two weeks between āI love youā and āIām sorry.ā
I keep going back to those last moments with herāwhat we said, how we laughed, how she looked at me like I was the only person in the room. I replay it all over and over, wishing I could bottle it up and live in that space forever. Grief has a strange way of warping time. Some days, two weeks feels like a heartbeat. Other days, it feels like a lifetime.
Exactly two weeks apart. That phrase haunts me. It reminds me how fragile life is, how quickly everything can shift. Itās a cruel number, a reminder of how close love and loss sit beside each other on the timeline of life. But even through the pain, Iām grateful I got to love her, even for just a little while. Because that loveāpure, powerful, and realāwill stay with me. Forever.