Seeing Differently
I’d lost my glasses. They were replaceable, yet I struggled more than I expected. The struggle was invisible—quiet, constant, easily overlooked. I found myself apologizing often. But amid the blur, I started to see the world in unexpected ways.
I had previously recognized my coworkers by their faces, their bright smiles across the hallway. Without my glasses, I relied on their essence—the way they laughed, walked, and carried themselves. I couldn’t make out their features, but I could recognize their energy: a familiar skip, a distinctive sway of a white coat, a certain laugh echoing down the hall; these became my cues.
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