He said, “One day I just said **** it.” Like that. Just like that. Quit his job, sold his stuff, bought a van— and now it’s him and Wolfie, his pointy-eared pup, somewhere between red dirt and blue sky on a road that doesn’t ask for permission.
I found him on some random forum — not even supposed to be there — we talked tonight, he told me things like I wasn’t just a name with no face. He told me about the sunsets he never planned to see, how they sneak up on him like a song that makes you stop walking, how the sky melts into colours too good for photos. And Wolfie, perched besides him, alert and calm, ears slicing the wind like she was born for freedom.
He said he did everything he was told to do. Uni. Job. Money. Success. People clapped. He felt nothing. So he left. No map, just vibes and Spotify.
And here I am. crammed into a plastic desk, under buzzing lights learning about wars I’ll never fight in clothes that aren’t me surrounded by people who talk but never say anything real.
I told him I’m 15 and tired all the time. He said, “That’s heavy for 15.” I said “It’s heavier when no one notices.” He said “Hold on. You won’t always be stuck.”
And maybe it’s weird, but I keep thinking about his van under that endless sky, Wolfie with ears like tiny sails chasing ghosts across sunburnt sand, and him— choosing beauty on purpose. And I pretend I’m not this ghost in a uniform but her— the girl who said **** it and meant it.
Maybe one day, when the world stops demanding hall passes, I’ll do it too. Maybe I’ll find my own road and a dog like Wolfie and a van and a sky that doesn’t judge me for wanting to disappear into something more.