When the Time Finally Arrives
Kayla bought the kayak in June. Bright yellow. Sleek. Light enough for her to carry (barely). She strapped it to the roof of her car, drove it home, and leaned it against the fence in her backyard. And there it stayed. All summer, she told herself the same things: "The water's too choppy today." "I don't have the right gear yet." "I'll go when I feel more ready." "What if I tip over?" She watched other people paddle from the shore. She saw their laughter drift across the water. She felt the small, familiar ache of watching life happen over there while she stood over here — dry, safe, and strangely empty. The kayak became a monument to her own hesitation. One Tuesday in late September, Kayla woke up before her alarm. Not gently. Not gradually. She sat bolt upright in bed, and a thought landed in her chest like a stone: "If I don't go today, I never will." No thunder. No angelic choir. Just a quiet, terrifying clarity. She...