Ano Ko No Kwari Ni Suki Na Dake 🎉
She confronted him.
It wasn’t anger in his voice. It was exhaustion. And that was worse—because it meant he truly believed this was enough . Mika walked home that night in the rain (because some clichés are true). And for the first time, she asked herself the right question: ano ko no kwari ni suki na dake
So when Yuto—Saki’s ex—started texting Mika a month after the breakup, she should have seen it coming. "You're easier to talk to than Saki." "You actually listen." "You're not like her at all." Mika’s heart fluttered. She mistook comparison for compliment . She confronted him
And when she does, Mika hoped she’d have the strength Mika eventually found: the strength to say, "I am not anyone’s instead. I am someone’s because." If you ever hear "ano ko no kwari ni suki na dake" directed at you—run. Not because you’re unlovable, but because you deserve to be loved as a first choice, not a substitute. And that was worse—because it meant he truly
Yuto compared her to Saki constantly—but not in the early "you're better" way. Now it was: