He Thought Love Had to Be Loud Until a Widow Opened Her Door at 1:47 AM

He Thought Love Had to Be Loud Until a Widow Opened Her Door at 1:47 AM

The guest room was made up. King-size bed, white linen sheets, the dry smell of lavender from a sachet on the nightstand. I woke a little after seven.

Downstairs, jazz played low. Jett Baker — my father used to put it on Sunday mornings. I came down in yesterday’s shirt, sleeves rolled, hair flat on one side.

Diane was at the kitchen island in a loose cream cashmere sweater and slim black silk pants. Barefoot. Her hair twisted up and held with a wooden pencil. No makeup. She looked better than she had the night before. The kind of beautiful that doesn’t need lighting.

“Maya started her weekend shift at seven,” she said without turning around. “I dropped her off at six.”

I cleared my throat. I was going to thank her and leave. That was the plan I’d built in the shower.

She set a coffee cup in front of the stool across from her. “You haven’t eaten. Sit.”

It wasn’t a suggestion. I sat. The coffee was warm in my palms. Morning sun moved across the inside of her wrist. The kitchen smelled like cinnamon and warm bread.

It hit me sitting there that this was the first woman in years who hadn’t needed me to perform anything.

“How old are you, Ethan?” she asked, finally looking up.

“Thirty-two.”

She nodded once, like she was confirming a number she’d already estimated. “Old enough to know better. Young enough to still be learning. That’s a good age.”

I stayed for breakfast. That wasn’t the plan, but I stayed. She cracked four eggs into a pan, pulled basil from a clay pot on the windowsill, made omelets the way someone does when they’ve made ten thousand of them.

I asked about the house. I’d noticed the joinery on the cabinets when I came down. Honest work. Old school.

“Mark and I designed it together,” she said. He was an architect. He passed three years ago. Heart attack at fifty-one. He was in the garden when it happened.

I didn’t push. I just listened. She didn’t cry. She didn’t get small. She talked about him the way you talk about a season that ended. Grateful. Not clinging.

She said he’d taught her how to choose a doorknob, how to angle a window for morning light, how to read a blueprint like a sentence. She said grief hadn’t broken her — but it had rearranged the furniture in her head.

I asked how she’d kept the design firm running through it.

She said for the first six months, she hadn’t. She’d let the partners cover everything. Then one Tuesday, she’d woken up at four in the morning and decided she was done being a passenger in her own life. She’d been in the office by seven. That had been three years ago, and she’d been on time every day since.

What I noticed most was what she didn’t do. She didn’t dwell on the pain. She talked about what the pain had taught her. There’s a difference, and most people don’t know it.

My phone buzzed face up on the counter between us. Tasha. Third time that morning.

I turned the phone over. Diane didn’t ask. She didn’t even glance at it — but I knew she’d seen.

After a long moment, she just said, “You don’t have to explain. We all have people we’re still learning to walk away from.”


I came back the following Saturday with a bookshelf in the bed of my truck. Small walnut, four shelves, the kind of piece I usually charge eight hundred dollars for. I’d made it Sunday through Thursday in the evenings after my paying work was done.

I told myself it was a thank-you. That’s what I told myself.

Maya answered the door this time. Her eyes went round. Then she grinned. “Mom, Ethan brought you something.”

Diane came around the corner from the reading room and stopped just for a second. The kind of stop where someone catches their own face and resets it before you can read it.

She crossed the room and put her fingers on the top of the shelf, followed the grain with her thumbnail.

“You made this.”

It wasn’t a question. I nodded.

She put it under the window in her reading room herself, refusing my help. The light fell across the walnut the way it falls across skin. She stood back, hand on her hip, and looked at it like it was a person.

She ran her palm along the top edge once more, slowly, and I watched her face shift through something I couldn’t name.

Then she turned to me and said, “Thank you. I don’t think you know what you just did.”

I started to answer. She held up one finger. “Don’t let it stand.”

It hit me then, hard enough to feel in my chest. This was the first time in years I’d given a woman something and not been asked why I hadn’t bought flowers instead. Tasha had treated every gift as a deficit. Diane treated this one as if I’d handed her a small piece of weight she’d been waiting for the floor to be ready to hold.


A week after that, she invited me to stay for tea.

We sat on the back patio. The garden was small, hemmed by old brick, but full — tomatoes climbing on twine, thyme and oregano in stone pots, mint in a wooden box she’d built herself.

“The year after Mark died, Maya was out with a friend,” she told me. “The house felt different without her in it. Quieter. But not in a sad way. Settled.”

I asked her, and regretted it the second it left my mouth. “Are you lonely?”

She didn’t flinch. She looked at her tea, then up at the brick wall, and took her time.

“Yes,” she said. “But loneliness isn’t the enemy. Clinging to the wrong person so you won’t feel it — that’s the enemy.”

I went quiet. I thought about Tasha. About seven months of not answering her texts, but not blocking her either. That little crack of light I’d left open in case I got weak.

Diane didn’t ask about her. She didn’t fish. But she was teaching me — not by giving me advice. By the way she sat there with her own loneliness like it was a houseplant she’d named.

She poured a second cup of tea for me without asking. The mint in it had come from the box six feet from my elbow.

She told me she’d started building that box the week she came home from Mark’s funeral, because she needed something to hammer. She’d cut every board wrong the first time and made herself redo it.

“Sometimes the most honest thing you can do for yourself,” she said, “is just refuse to let your hands stay still.”

I told her the smallest piece of Tasha then. Not the whole shape of it. Just that I’d left somebody loud and I was still figuring out how to live in a quiet room without thinking the quiet meant something was wrong.

She nodded. She didn’t tell me I’d done the right thing. She didn’t tell me anything. She just nodded and refilled my tea again and let me sit in the quiet I was still learning to trust.


Two weeks later, I came back with my tool bag. The back door had been sticking. Maya had mentioned it in passing the last visit. I’d thought about it on and off all week.

I pulled the hinges, sanded the swollen edge of the frame, set them back. Twenty-two minutes.

Diane stayed in the kitchen the whole time, browning onions, talking to Maya about a customer at the cafe who’d ordered seven different things and complained about all of them. She didn’t watch me work. She trusted me.

When I was done, she called me in to eat. The three of us at the kitchen table. Maya told stories with her hands. Diane laughed in that low, quiet way of hers. And I laughed too, more than once. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d laughed at a dinner table.

The kitchen smelled like tomato sauce and roasted garlic. Two beeswax candles on the table. Not for romance — just because Diane liked candles. The light caught her eyes across the flame, and I had to look away.

After dinner, Maya kissed her mother on the head and went upstairs. Diane and I cleared the plates together. She washed. I dried.

When she handed me the last plate, her fingers brushed mine. Not on purpose. Not not on purpose, either.

Neither of us moved for a half second. Neither of us pulled away.

Then she stepped back calmly, dried her hands on the towel hanging from the oven, and said, “It’s getting late.”

I nodded. I walked to the door. She walked with me.

On the porch, she looked at me, hand still on the frame the way it had been the first night.

“Ethan, I’m not in a hurry. Whatever this is — neither of us is.”

I drove home. I didn’t sleep until almost four. I lay on my back, staring at the ceiling, thinking about her hand on a coffee cup, the wooden pencil in her hair. The way she’d said “neither of us is” without making it sound like a question.

Before I left that night, she’d stopped me one last time at the threshold.

“I’m forty-six years old. I’ve buried a husband. I don’t play games. If you’re not sure, that’s okay. But don’t pretend with me.”

I’d looked at her, really looked, and I’d told her the truth.

“I’ve never been more sure of not being sure in my life.”

She laughed just once, a short low sound. “That’s the most honest thing anyone has said to me in three years.”


It was a Saturday afternoon when Tasha showed up at the shop.

I was running a hand plane over a maple slab for a client’s kitchen island, curls of shavings building up against my boot. The bay door was rolled halfway up.

I heard heels on concrete before I saw her.

She was wearing a tight red dress, the kind she used to wear when she wanted to make a point in a room. Heavy eyeliner. Her perfume hit me before she did — jasmine and alcohol, sharp and old at the same time. She’d been drinking. It was three in the afternoon.

“I heard you’ve got somebody new,” she said. “Some old lady.”

I set the plane down slowly. I didn’t ask how she knew. I’d already worked it out. Marcus’s cousin was Maya. Maya worked at the cafe downtown. Tasha had a friend who lived in that neighborhood. The lines were short in this city, and I’d known they would catch up to me eventually.

She walked the length of my workbench, running her red fingernail along the edge of my tools. She picked up a chisel and put it down in the wrong slot. She knew what she was doing. She’d been in this shop a hundred times, and she knew which placements would get under my skin.

“You remember when we used to come in here?” she said. “On the workbench late at night? You remember that, baby?”

I remembered. I remembered too well. I remembered the first time she’d come here, eyes shining, telling me she wanted to learn how I worked. I remembered when she’d stopped pretending to care about the woodwork and started using the shop as a backdrop for her stories. I remembered the last time she’d been here — throwing a coffee mug across the bay because I’d said I had a deadline.

“I want you to leave.”

“How old is she? Forty? Fifty?” She turned and looked at me, head tilted. “Are you really that desperate?”

“Don’t talk about her.”

She laughed. It wasn’t a good laugh. “Oh, you’re protecting her. That’s sweet.”

I walked to the bay door and rolled it the rest of the way up so the whole street could see in. I don’t know why exactly. I just wanted the air. I wanted witnesses, maybe. I wanted no shadows.

“Tasha, go home.”

She stood there a long time. Then she walked out slowly, hips loose. At the doorway, she turned.

“This isn’t over.”

I didn’t answer. I stood in the shop for ten minutes after she left, hands flat on the bench. My hands were shaking — but not the way they used to shake around her. They were shaking from the realization that they weren’t shaking the way they used to.


Eight days later, my phone rang.

Maya. Her voice was thin.

“There’s a woman on our porch. She’s asking about my mom. My mom’s talking to her. Ethan, please.”

I broke speed limits getting there.

When I pulled up, I could hear the shouting from the curb. Tasha was on the porch in the same red dress, makeup running, gesturing with her whole body. Diane was framed in the doorway — same cream sweater, same wooden pencil in her hair, hand on the frame, just like the first night.

I caught the tail of what Tasha was yelling as I came up the walk.

“You don’t even know who he is! He loved me! He’s going to get bored of you! You’re old! You’re a placeholder! You’re just a placeholder, you stupid —”

Diane didn’t interrupt. She let her finish. She let her hear herself say it out loud, every ugly word of it, and she didn’t even shift her weight.

Then, when Tasha ran out of breath, Diane said in the same low, even voice she used to talk about basil and doorknobs:

“You’re not angry at me. You’re angry that he chose peace over chaos. That’s not my problem to solve.”

Tasha spun. She saw me coming up the steps. Her eyes were red. She lurched at me and pushed her open palms against my chest hard.

“What did you tell her? Did you tell her how I loved you?”

I didn’t step back. I didn’t put my hands on her either. I let her shove me a second time. I let her exhaust the motion. I knew if I touched her, she’d find a way to make my hands the story.

“Tasha,” I said, keeping my voice low because I knew Diane was listening. “You didn’t love me. You love that I belong to you. Those are two different things.”

She stared at me for one second. I saw the woman she might have been if her wiring had run differently. I’d waited four years to see that woman — and she was gone again before I could finish the thought.

I waited to feel afraid. I’d been afraid of her for seven months. I’d been afraid of her even after I left. Afraid of the texts, afraid of the silence between them, afraid that one day she’d find a way to make my life small again.

I waited, standing there on Diane’s porch with Tasha’s hands still pressed against my shirt.

The fear didn’t come.

Pity came instead. Pity and the clean understanding that pity isn’t a reason to go back.

Then she crumpled into the kind of crying that’s mostly performance. And she started threatening. She was going to tell my parents. She was going to call my clients. She was going to ruin me on the internet, on every platform, in every group chat she could find.

“Do what you need to do,” I told her. “I don’t belong to you anymore.”

She drove away too fast. Her tires squealed at the corner.

Diane and I stood on the porch. Maya had quietly closed herself into the back of the house. The street was suddenly very still.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “I shouldn’t have brought her to your door.”

Diane shook her head. “She’s not your fault. She’s your past. There’s a difference.”

I looked at her. The porch light was on the side of her face. She wasn’t shaken. She wasn’t even surprised.

“Aren’t you scared?” I asked. “She could come back.”

She was quiet for a second. Then she turned and looked straight at me.

“Ethan, I sat by my husband’s bed for the last six hours of his life. I buried my father when I was twenty-eight. I’m not afraid of a girl shouting on my porch.”

I nodded. I didn’t know what to say.

“The question isn’t whether she comes back,” Diane said. “The question is whether you do.”

“No,” I said. No pause. No hedge.

She looked at me for a long time. “Then that’s all I need to know.”


I stayed on her porch for another half hour after that. Maya came out eventually, eyes a little red but holding it together, and Diane folded her daughter under one arm without saying anything. The three of us watched the street go dark. Nobody talked. There was nothing to fix with words.

When I finally drove home that night, I sat on my couch in the dark for twenty minutes.

Then I picked up my phone and blocked Tasha’s number. First time in seven months. It took two taps. I waited to feel guilty about it.

I didn’t.

I just felt the quiet move one inch closer in.

The next morning, I dragged a cardboard box out of my closet. I’d kept her things in there because I told myself I was being decent. Two necklaces, a leather jacket, a leather-bound journal I’d never read. I packed them carefully into a shipping box. I drove to the post office on Maple and sent it to the last address I had for her. No return. No note.

Standing at the counter, I felt a small piece of weight lift out from between my shoulders — weight I hadn’t realized I’d been carrying.

Then I sat in my truck in the post office parking lot and went through my phone. I deleted every photo she was in. I deleted her number from my contacts. I unfollowed her on every platform. I didn’t make a big thing out of it. I just stopped carrying her in my pocket.

I sat with my hands on the wheel for a few minutes after that, late morning sun coming through the windshield, and let myself feel how strange it was to no longer be in a kind of low-grade emergency. For four years, my body had been braced. For seven months after, my body had still been braced — just for a different kind of impact.

I rolled my shoulders back. I took a real breath. It was the first one in a long time that didn’t taste like waiting.


I called my mother that afternoon. She picked up on the second ring the way she always does.

I told her about Diane. Not everything — enough. The age. The husband she’d buried. The way the kitchen had felt that first morning. The bookshelf I’d built her without overthinking it.

She was quiet for a long time. I could hear the kettle clicking off in her kitchen in Oregon.

“Fourteen years between you,” she said finally. “Are you sure?”

“Mom,” I said, “for the first time in four years, I’m not guessing what a woman actually thinks. I’m sure.”

She didn’t say anything for a beat. Then: “Then you bring her to meet me at Christmas.”

And I could hear under her voice the smallest piece of relief.

I drove to Diane’s three days later. Maya was gone — she’d taken off for a barista certification course in a city three hours north. The house was quiet in a different way without her.

Diane led me to the reading room. The walnut bookshelf I’d built her was full now. My work standing under the window, holding her life. I noticed she’d put Mark’s books on the bottom shelf and her own on top. Not in a hiding way. In a way that looked deliberate, like she’d thought it through.

She poured two glasses of red wine and sat across from me with her legs folded under her.

“I need to tell you a few things.”

She told me she’d been scared too. After Mark, she’d made herself a promise that she would never let herself need someone again. Three years she’d lived alone. Three years she’d been good at it — better than good. She’d built a business, a garden, a life. She’d stopped flinching at the second pillow on her bed. She’d stopped expecting the front door to open at six in the evening.

There had been two men in those three years. Both kind. Both wrong. One had asked her to move into his house after four dinners. The other had asked her to stop talking about Mark by the second month. She’d ended both politely, gone home, and felt nothing but relief.

She’d taken that as proof. Proof she was done. Proof she didn’t have it in her anymore.

And then she said, looking at her wine, “You showed up at my door with my drunk daughter on your shoulder. And I thought, ‘Oh, there he is. The one I wouldn’t let myself wait for.'”

I didn’t speak. I just reached across the small table between us and took her hand. It was the first time I’d touched her on purpose.

Her fingers were cool. They closed around mine.

We sat like that for a long time. Neither of us said anything. The wine in our glasses went still.


Maya came home a day earlier than planned. She walked into the kitchen at seven in the morning and found me at the counter pouring coffee into two cups — one for me, one for her mother. Diane was on the stool in her robe.

Maya stopped. I stopped.

Diane didn’t.

Maya looked at her mother, then at me, then at the two coffee cups. Then slowly she smiled.

“I knew,” she said. “I knew that first night. Mom didn’t look at me when she opened the door. She looked at you.”

She wasn’t angry. She wasn’t even surprised.

She walked across the kitchen, kissed her mother on the temple, and turned to me.

“You treat her better than anyone ever has. Keep doing that.”

She hugged Diane. She hugged me. Then she got down a third mug and poured her own coffee.

And we all stood there in the morning light like it had always been this way.

She asked her mother what she was making for dinner. She asked me if I’d be there.

Diane said yes. I said yes.

Maya nodded once — the way her mother sometimes did — and went upstairs to shower.


That night, Diane and I sat on the back patio with a wool blanket over her shoulders. The air had gone sharp and cool. Fall was coming.

“Do you want this to be real?” I asked. “Out loud? In front of your friends? Your colleagues, the neighbors?”

She tipped her head back and looked at the stars over the brick wall.

“I spent half my life trying to make other people comfortable. I don’t intend to spend the other half doing it.”

“Then let’s try,” I said. “No rush. No performing. Just real.”

“Just real,” she said.

I leaned across and kissed her. It wasn’t a hungry kiss. It wasn’t a fireworks kiss. It was the kiss of someone who’d waited long enough to be sure.

When I pulled back, she had her eyes closed. She kept them closed for another breath too — like she was letting herself feel it without an audience.

Then she opened them and looked at me, and the smallest piece of the woman I’d seen in the doorway that first night was gone for good.


I spent that whole summer at her house on the weekends. I rebuilt the back fence in cedar. I tore out the old outdoor dining table Mark had built and made her a new one, longer, in white oak. I asked her permission before I did it.

She held my face in both hands and said, “Build me a new one. He’d want that.”

I planted a row of lavender along the south wall because she’d mentioned once that she’d always meant to. I fixed the dripping faucet in the laundry room she’d been ignoring for two years. I replaced the bulb in the porch lantern.

None of these were grand gestures. None of them were performances. They were the small accumulated work of a man who liked a woman’s house enough to want to keep it standing.

I noticed something working in her yard that I hadn’t noticed working anywhere else. The shape of peace. With Tasha, even good days had a low static under them — the hum of waiting for the next scene. At Diane’s house, the static wasn’t there. I’d plane a board for an hour and look up and realize my shoulders had come down off my ears.

She started introducing me to her people. Most of them were women her age, friends from twenty years back. A few of her old design clients. I braced for judgment.

I got something else. Curiosity. A few sharp questions, but not cruel ones.

One of them, a retired professor named Helen, asked me at a dinner what I’d be doing in twenty years. I told her I’d be building the same furniture in the same shop, only slower.

She laughed and told Diane I was a keeper. Diane just sipped her wine.

Margaret, her oldest friend, cornered me at the same dinner and gripped my arm above the elbow. “She hasn’t laughed like that in three years,” Margaret said. “Don’t mess this up.”

“No, ma’am,” I said. I meant it.


One night late, we were in bed just talking, not touching. The window was open and the curtain was moving.

I said the thing I’d been holding for weeks.

“When you’re sixty, I’ll be forty-six. When you’re seventy, I’ll be fifty-six.”

“I know.”

“Are you scared?”

She was quiet for a while. Then she rolled toward me on the pillow.

“Yes. But I’m more scared of living carefully and dying with regret. Mark taught me that. Not by how he lived — by how he left.”

I lay there with that for a long time. And I understood something I’d been circling around for months. I wasn’t replacing Mark. I wasn’t in some quiet competition with a dead man. I was living my own life. And Diane was choosing every day to share it with me.


Eight months passed. I opened a second shop downtown, three times the size of my east side place. Diane designed the interior. It was our first project together. She refused to bill me. I paid her by building her a new desk for the office she was renovating — walnut top, hand-cut dovetails, brass pulls I’d cast at a friend’s forge.

The first day she sat down at it, she ran her palm across the surface twice, slow, then looked up at me and just nodded.

Maya finished her certification course and opened a little cafe with a girlfriend from school. They called it Slow Morning. I built the bar out of reclaimed oak from a barn outside town. I didn’t charge her. She framed the receipt I never gave her and hung it behind the espresso machine as a joke.

I flew my mother out from Oregon in October. She and Diane spent four hours in the kitchen the first afternoon making a pie my grandmother used to make, talking about nothing I could follow from the next room.

When I drove my mother to the airport at the end of the week, she put her hand on my forearm at the curb and said, “She’s not going to hurt you. I can tell.”

She didn’t say anything else. She didn’t have to.

Diane and I weren’t married. We weren’t living together. I kept my apartment, my space, my morning quiet. She kept her house, her routines, her own breathing room. But I had a key to her place. She had a key to mine. We ate dinner together four nights a week, sometimes five. We didn’t need to fold our lives into one to know they belonged in the same room.


One afternoon in early fall, I was sitting at Maya’s cafe with Diane. The two of us splitting a slice of olive oil cake at the window seat.

I happened to look up, and through the glass, I saw Tasha across the street.

She’d seen me first. She stopped at the curb. She looked at me, then at Diane, then at my hand resting on the small of Diane’s back without me thinking about it.

I braced. I felt my whole body get ready.

Tasha didn’t come in. She didn’t shout.

She just nodded. Small, barely there. Almost like she was confirming something for herself.

Then she crossed the street and kept walking. I watched her until she turned the corner. I noticed she was wearing flats. Tasha used to refuse to leave the apartment without heels.

Something in her had quieted down too. Or maybe she was just tired of the act. Either way, she wasn’t my problem to read anymore.

“Who was that?” Diane asked, not turning her head.

“Nobody anymore,” I said.

And it was true. Not because I hated her. Because I didn’t need her to be anything to me anymore. I didn’t need her to be the villain. I didn’t need to win against her. I didn’t need her forgiveness or her apology. I’d stopped writing her into the story of my life, and the page had finally gone blank.


That evening, we drove back to Diane’s. The first cold front of the season had blown in while we were at the cafe.

I built a fire in the living room hearth — the one Mark had laid with his own hands the summer before he died. The dry oak caught fast, and I sat back on my heels, watching the flame find its shape.

Diane curled into the armchair across from me with her legs tucked under her, reading. The lamp was warm on her hair. She was wearing reading glasses she didn’t need very often. The smallest lines were at the corners of her eyes.

I thought about that first night. The wool dress. The way her hand had rested on the door frame. The rain that had started just as she’d told me to come inside.

I thought about how close I’d come to standing on that porch for one more polite second and then turning around. How close I’d come to thanking her, declining the offer, driving home through the wet streets, and never coming back.

I almost said no. I almost drove back to my empty apartment, slept alone, kept on pretending I was fine. I would have been fine. That was the part that still scared me. I would have been fine for the rest of my life in a small, gray, fine kind of way — and I never would have known what I’d missed.

She looked up, caught me watching.

“What?”

“Nothing,” I said. “Just… thank you for opening the door.”

She smiled without showing her teeth. The same smile from the first night.

“Thank you for walking through it.”


I used to think love had to be loud to be real. I used to think it had to be full of tears and jealousy and nights you didn’t sleep because you were too furious at each other. I used to think that if a woman wasn’t hurting me, she didn’t really need me.

Diane never hurt me. She never made a scene. She never checked my phone. She never threatened to leave so I’d chase her.

And for the first six months, I kept asking myself in some buried part of my chest whether this was real love or whether I was just settling.

Then I figured it out. I’d been mistaking chaos for passion. I’d been mistaking exhaustion for caring. I’d spent four years in a relationship where love was measured in decibels, and I’d come out of it convinced that was the only key the song could be played in.

Diane taught me a different one. The love of a grown woman — a woman who has buried a husband, raised her children, lived alone long enough to know she didn’t need anyone to make her whole.

That love is quiet. It doesn’t need to prove itself. It just needs to be received.

I’m not pretending the age doesn’t matter. There are nights I lie awake thinking about it. There are days I think about the math — about who’s likely to be the one left behind. But I’d rather have ten real years than fifty pretend ones. I’d rather sit by her bed someday, the way she sat by Mark’s, than wake up at sixty next to someone I never actually let in.

The night she opened her door, she didn’t save me. She just showed me that a different door existed.

The walking through that part — I had to do myself.


So let me ask you two things tonight.

First: have you ever mistaken noise for love? Have you stayed with someone because their chaos made you feel necessary — instead of because their presence made you feel peaceful?

Second: if a quiet door opened for you tonight — a door that didn’t promise anything except kindness — would you have the courage to walk through it? Or would you drive back to the empty apartment?

Because what’s familiar is always safer than what’s true.

And sometimes, the bravest thing you can do is nod before you’ve finished thinking.

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