She thinks about people she cares about. About moments that mattered. About things she didn’t get to say. She might revisit a memory that made her smile, or sit with a feeling she pushed aside earlier because there wasn’t time to feel it fully.
This is where those emotions surface.
In the quiet.
In the stillness of that simple position.
And sometimes, there’s comfort in small things.
A piece of chocolate. A handful of chips. Something simple, eaten slowly, without guilt or ceremony. Not because she’s hungry, but because it feels good. Because it adds a layer of softness to the moment.
Wrapped in clean sheets, surrounded by the familiarity of her own space, she allows herself to exist without expectation.
No one is asking anything from her here.
No one needs her to respond, to decide, to solve.
It’s just her.
And that’s what makes the moment so meaningful.
Because in a life filled with roles—daughter, partner, friend, professional, caregiver—this is one of the few spaces where she doesn’t have to be anything for anyone else.
She can just be.