It had been one of the longest nights of my life. The sterile white walls of the hospital seemed to stretch endlessly, as though they were swallowing every ounce of comfort I once knew. Machines beeped rhythmically in the background, reminding me of the fragile line between life and loss. I had just finished saying an emotional goodbye to my husband, Daniel, unsure of what the coming hours would bring. My heart was heavy, my eyes swollen from tears, and yet, somewhere deep inside me, there was still a spark I refused to let die.
As I walked out of his hospital room and down the cold corridor, I tried to steady my breathing. Every step echoed with finality, and yet I didn’t want to accept what the doctors had said. I paused at the end of the hall, pressing my hand against the cool glass of a window that looked out onto the city skyline. Cars moved in the distance, streetlights flickered, and life outside seemed almost mocking in its normalcy. Didn’t the world know that my world was falling apart?