She was me when I pretended I didn’t care. She was me when I cared too much. She was me when I smiled for a photo and thought, no one here knows me.
So here’s to the strangers who become our mirrors. Here’s to the women we see ourselves in, even if we’ll never meet them. Here’s to the truth that no matter how unique our pain feels, someone else has worn it like skin.
We project onto public figures all the time. We see our struggles in their tired eyes, our resilience in their comebacks. But this felt different. This felt like looking into a mirror that had been fogged up for years, finally clear.
Yes. That.
Maybe that’s why we cling to certain celebrities, certain scenes, certain songs. Not because they’re perfect, but because they accidentally show us our own hidden rooms. Lena Paul didn’t know me. But for a moment, watching her, I recognized myself — and that felt like being seen by someone who wasn’t even looking.
For me, that person was Lena Paul.
There’s a strange kind of recognition that happens when you watch someone who looks like you — not just in bone structure or hair color, but in essence . The way they move through a room, the slight hesitation before a smile, the way they hold their own weight like a secret.
And to Lena — wherever you are, whoever you are behind the lens — thank you for being, for a moment, me. Would you like this tailored to a specific tone (more poetic, analytical, or personal journal-style)?
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