#decolonize-the-left
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Hey it's decolonize-the-left/2spirit-0spoons
....they got me again. At least they got my political sideblog. I still have my main backup acct tho, which is weird and honestly this account may not last either.
A shame this happened right after we were reunited too đđ
And so at the risk of being annoying and possibly even cringe. Can you post this and help me get my bluesky out just in case ppl wanna keep following me elsewhere? (Or here on my new tumblr main?)
https://bsky.app/profile/2spirit1spoon.bsky.social
Cuz i genuinely don't know if I'm gonna remake another politics blog on here. I might do substack or patreon or something but idk, anyway...
Its very clear to me rn censorship will get worse and while I know there's isn't really a Safe place on the internet, rn I'm trying em all out đŽâđ¨
So if you or anyone else has suggestions on where to go, please send them my way đ
o7 you're braver than any US marine. Redbook/Xiaohongshu is pretty interesting so far. Gotta have some Chinese tho, but folks aren't outright assholes for the most part which is a fucking culture shock lmao.
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Cops are not and have
never been our allies,
they never will be.
Beep boop! I look for accidental haiku posts. Sometimes I mess up.
If sexual activity between same-gender people became illegal, the police would be the ones enforcing those laws.
That's why police are not welcome at Pride. Pride is for unconditional supporters, not for those who would become enemies as soon as they're ordered to.
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They blocked me so I can't reblog directly but I have a primordial need to post this
#left communism#communism#national liberation#left communist#land back#decolonization#liberal#decolonialism
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The Anarchists
We got the invitation through a Mapuche friend we had worked with on our previous trip to Wallmapu. Having been their guest, and having collaborated on land recovery, translation and diffusion about their struggle, prisoner support, and other projects, we had a personal basis of trust, solidarity, and friendship. Without that, they never would have thought of contacting us when they learned that a nearby community needed to find a way to generate its own electricity.
The next step was finding comrades who were interested in the project and had the needed skills. We prepared for several months making arrangements, getting resources together, and practicing techniques for the fabrication of different generation systems.
We also talked about our expectations and desires for the trip.
A clear priority for everyone involved was a total rejection of charity. We did not see ourselves as privileged people going to help underprivileged others, nor as allies to the Mapuche struggle. The only reason we considered going was because the Mapuche were struggling for their freedom, and we as anarchists were involved in a distinct but interconnected struggle for our own freedom. This was, in a sense, the âcommunity of freedomsâ Fredy Perlman writes about.
The purpose of the project was to deepen the relationship of solidarity between different people in struggle. We were being invited because of specific skills some of us had, but we had no illusions about being unique in that regard. Only because the Mapuche had created such a potent, insightful struggle was this project even possible. It is no coincidence that none of us had ever set up an electricity generation system before; never before had doing so held revolutionary implications. We wanted learning on this trip to go both ways, and we knew that it would. Speaking for myself, the conversations and experiences I had on the previous trip to Wallmapu, the worldview and the vision of struggle I encountered, forever altered my own practice as an anarchist.
Because it was impossible to communicate directly with the people in the community until we arrived, when planning the trip we decided we should begin with a conversation about our goals, motivations, and expectations. We would not get distracted by the technical details, as important as they were. We were not going to set up a generation system in a village, we were going to deepen our relationships. The material infrastructure was an anchor that would permit the intensification of anticapitalist relations, and a point of leverage for the liberated social relations to push back against the imposed capitalist social relations.
As such, success for the project could be defined as the following:
forming relationships that would enable mutual solidarity
working together with peĂąi and lamuen in a collective process to install one or several models of electricity generation using local materials, with an emphasis on passing on skills, such that the model could be recreated without external aid and set up in other communities in struggle.
In other words, if we effectively set up an electricity generation system in a community and left, and the people there did not know how to make another one on their own, the project would have been a failure for us.
#ally-industrial complex#anti-colonialism#critique of the left#decolonization#gender roles#Indigenous solidarity#interpersonal relationships#Mapuche#memory#privilege#repression#reskilling#Return Fire#sabotage#spirituality#wallmapu#anarchism#anarchy#anarchist society#practical anarchy#practical anarchism#resistance#autonomy#revolution#communism#anti capitalist#anti capitalism#late stage capitalism#daily posts#libraries
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youtube
#libya#free libya#social justice#muammar gaddafi#important#political#political posting#politics#world politics#decolonization#pan africanism#anti imperialism#anti colonialism#anti colonization#leftist#leftism#leftisim#socialist#socialism#leftist politics#socialist politics#left wing#left wing politics#african politics#human rights#africa#tumblr recommendations#recommendation#recommend#youtube recommendations
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#Lausan Collective#activism#leftism#China#Hong Kong#diaspora#solidarity#progressivism#decolonization#feminism#social justice#politics#antiauthoritarian#radical left#racial justice#exploitation#capitalism#colonialism#imperialism#neoliberalism
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so i was fully prepared to rip into Tumblr for trying to pull its "queerest place on the internet" rainbow capitalism bullshit again this year... but it's actually feeling kind of disconcerting that it doesn't seem like they've actually done anything for Pride, as far as i can tell...
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youtube
#decolonize#SWANA#lebanon#class war#Where are the Arabs#Advice for the western left#What is a revolution?#Palestine#From the Periphery#Youtube
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Israel has cut water, electricity and food to Palestinians in Gaza. They are buying 10.000 M16 rifles and plan to distribute to civilian settlers in the West Bank to hunt down Palestinians. They're bombing the only way out of Gaza through Egypt, after telling refugees to flee through it, and have threatened the Egyptian government in case they let aid trucks pass through. Entire families, generations, are being wiped out and left to wander the streets hoping they don't get bombed.
Palestinians are using their last minutes of battery to let the world know about their genocide and are being met with a wall of "What about Hamas? What about the beheaded babies? Killing children on either side is bad!" even though the propaganda claims have been debunked over and over again. How cruel is it to ask somebody to condemn themselves before their last words? Or before grieving the loss of their entire families? When there's no such disclaimer to Israelis even though their government has shown over and over genocidal intent? Like who are you even trying to appease? What will your wishy washy statement do against decades of zionist thought infiltrating evangelical and Jewish stablishmemts?
Take action. Israel will fall back if public opinion turns its tide. The UK fell back on its bloody decision to cut aid to Palestine under public scrutiny. The USAmerican empire spends $3.8 billion dollars annually solely on this proxy war while its people suffer under a progressively military regime as well. News outlets are canceling last minute on Palestinian speakers while letting Israelis tell lies unchecked. Palestinian refugees are being targeted in ICE establishments and mosques are already being hounded by the FBI. France and Germany have banned pro-Palestine protests, while Netherlands and the UK have placed restrictions . You have the chance to stop this from turning into repeat of the Iraq war.
I want to do something but there's hardly anything for me to do from Brasil besides spreading the word and not letting these testimonies fall on deaf ears. I'm asking you to do this same ant work from wherever you are.
Follow:
Eye On Palestine (instagram / twitter)
Mohammed El-Kurd (instagram / twitter)
Decolonize Palestine (website with a chronological explanation of the occupation and debunking myths)
Muhammad Shehada (twitter)
Plestia Alaqad (directly from Gaza. Many of her videos are interrupted by bombs)
If there's a protest in your city, please attend. Here's an international calendar of events:
Friday, October 13
ALBUQUERQUE, NM (US) â Fri Oct. 13, 3 pm, UNM Bookstore, University of New Mexico. Organized by Southwest Coalition for Palestine.
BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA (US) â Fri Oct 13, 6 pm, Sproul Hall (Vigil), University of California Berkeley. Organized by Bears for Palestine.
DOUAIS, FRANCE â Fri Oct 13, 6:30 pm, Place deâArmes.
GOTHENBURG, SWEDEN â Fri Oct 13, 5:30 pm, Brunnsparken. Organized by Palestinska samordningsgruppen Gothenburg.
GREENSBORO, NC (US) â Fri Oct. 13, 4 pm, Wendover Village, 4203 W Wendover Ave, Greensboro, NC. Organized by Muslims for a Better NC.
LONDON, ENGLAND â Fri Oct 13, 5 pm, Keir Starmerâs Office, Crowndale Center, 218 Eversholt St, London. Organized by IJAN UK.
MEANJIN/BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA â Fri Oct 13, 6 pm, King George Square.
MIAMI, FL (US) â Fri Oct 13, 4:30 pm, Bayfront Park. Organized by Troika Kollectiv.
NAPOLI, ITALY â Fri Oct 13, 4:30 pm, Piazza Garibaldi, Napoli. Organized by GPI and Centro Culturale Handala Ali.
NGUNNAWAL/CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA â Fri Oct 13, 5:30 pm, Carema Place.
PERTH/BOORLOO, AUSTRALIA â Fri Oct. 13, 5:30 pm, Murray Street Hall, Boorloo/Perth. Organized by Friends of Palestine WA.
PORTLAND, OREGON (US) â Fri Oct 13, 3 pm, 1200-1220 SW 5th Ave, Portland.
PORT RICHEY, FL (US) â Fri Oct 13, 7:30 am, Route 19 and Ridge Road, Port Richey. Sponsored by: Florida Peace Action Network; Partners for Palestine; CADSI
PRETORIA, SOUTH AFRICA â Friday, Oct. 13, 7 pm, UP Main Campus, DSA Building opposite Thuto. Organized by PSC UP.
WITSWATERSRAND UNIVERSITY (SOUTH AFRICA) â Fri Oct 13, 1 pm, Great Hall Piazza, Flag demonstration. Organized by Wits PSC.
Saturday, October 14
ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND â Sat, Oct. 14, 2 pm, St. Nichlas Square. Organized by Scottish PSC.
AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND â Sat Oct 14, 2 pm, Aotea Square, Queens St, 291-2997 Queen St. Organized by PSN Aotearoa.
DETROIT/DEARBORN, MICHIGAN (US) â Sat Oct 14, 2 pm, Ford Woods Park, 5700 Greenfield Road. Organized by SAFE, PYM, SJP, Handala Coalition, more.
DUNDEE, SCOTLAND â Sat, Oct. 14, 2 pm, Place TBA. Organized by Scottish PSC.
EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND â Sat, Oct 14, 2 pm, Princes Street at Foot of the Mound. Organized by Scottish PSC.
FRANKFURT, GERMANY â Sat Oct 14, 3 pm Hauptwache, Frankfurt am Main. Sponsored by Palestina eV, Migrantifa Rhein-Main and more.
GLASGOW, SCOTLAND â Sat. Oct 14, 2 pm, Buchanan Steps. Organized by Scottish PSC.
HOUSTON, TEXAS (US) â Sat Oct 14, 2 pm, City Hall, 901 Bagby St. Organizd by PYM, PAC, USPCN, SJP and more.
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND â Sat Oc 14, 12 pm, Church St. Organized by FRFI.
LONDON, ENGLAND â Sat Oct 14, 12 pm, BBC Portland Place, London. Organized by a broad coalition.
MILANO, ITALY â Sat. Oct 14, 3:30 pm, Piazza San Babila. Organized by Young Palestinians of Italy, UDAP, Palestinian Community, Association of Palestinians.
ORLANDO, FLORIDA â Sat Oct 14, 3 pm, Lake Eola at Robinson and Eola, Orland. Organized by Florida Palestine Network.
TORINO, ITALY â Sat. Oct. 14, 3 pm, Piazza Crispi. Organized by Progetto Palestina.
VALPARAISO, CHILE â Sat Oct 14, 6 pm, Plaza Victoria, Valparaiso. Organized by Comite Chileno de Solidaridad con Palestina.
WASHINGTON, DC (US) â Sat Oct 14, 1 pm, Lafayette Square. Organized by AMP.
Sunday, October 15
AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS â Sun Oct 15, 2 pm, March from Dam Square to Jonas Daniel Meijer plein.
NAARM/MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA â Sun Oct 15, State Library Victoria.
TARDANYA/ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA â Sun Oct 15, 2 pm, Parliament House.
AUSTIN, TEXAS (US) â Sun Oct 15, 3 pm, Texas Capitol. Organized by PSC ATX.
GADIGAL/SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA â Sun Oct 15, 1 pm, Sydney Town Hall.
SANTIAGO, CHILE -Sun Oct 15, 11 am, Plaza Dignidad, Santiago. Organized by Comite Chileno de Solidaridad con Palestina.
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@crabs-in-a-trench-coat

This was actually a commentary about the overwhelmingly common phenomenon of leftists stanning Hamas and justifying the Oct 7th terror attacks as "decolonization" but thanks for your input and your astute Noticing of Patterns about those (((certain groups))). Thank god we have brave leftists like you pointing out just how much (((they))) have infiltrated the left and have so much support right now. đđ
It's weird how in the past 5 or so years the left's understanding of decolonization devolved into some kind of weird Nazi era eugenicist thing about how people's "true places" are something encoded in their DNA and no one in the history of the world should have moved anywhere and anyone decendent from people who moved at some point should be shot.
#Antisemitism#Leftist antisemitism#Literally un fucking believable#Yeah it's too bad those Jews have so much support on the left rn for commiting atrocities in the name of decolonization#Oh wait! That's Hamas.#Jumblr
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Help save Bilal and his family!
My friend Bilal @bilal-salah0 needs our help!!
image transcript:
my name is bilal. my family is comprised of 18 members: 10 adults, 8 children under 16 yrs old and newborns.
for over a year now, i've been living in germany, far from my home and family in palestine. when the war started, my family has been living in fear for their lives daily ever since. despite my long work hours and responsibilities, i still managed to promote my family's fundraiser. with all of your help, we successfully reached our original goal.
in a cruel twist of fate, i lost my job, my apartment and my residence permit. i am currently in danger of deportation from germany that could happen anytime soon!
without my job, i am forced to dip into the money of my family's evacuation fund to cover my daily expenses. our goal had to be raised from âŹ70,000 to âŹ100,000. i feel terribly sorry, as this was not an easy decision to make.
donations has been slowing down ever since we reached our original goal. i do not have much time left. you are free to repost this image, share my story and donate if you can. i believe in you. from the bottom of my heart, thank you.
bilalâs gfm is currently sitting at:
âŹ85,817 / âŹ100,000
HE NEEDS TO REACH HIS GOAL BY 15TH AUGUST! THAT MEANS HE HAS TO RAISE ABOUT 14K IN THE NEXT 4 DAYS! WE ARE RUNNING OUT OF TIME!
his campaign has been verified and can be found on @/el-shab-hussein's and @/nabulsi's list of vetted fundraisers here (#132, line 136) so PLEASE don't hesitate to share and donate.
he managed to reach his original goal once, surely with our help he can reach his new goal! so donât give up. PLEASE share this everywhere â to your friends and family, groupchats, discord servers, wherever you have reach. engage and donate if you can. much love.
[ID: a gfm link with a picture of two small children sitting in the sand in front of a cooking pot. they are looking up a the camera, eyes half-closed. the title reads "Donate to Help Evacuate My Family from Gaza to Safety, organized by Bilal salah" End ID]
post referenced here
tagging for reach under cut, feel free to let me know if you want to be removed:
@commissions4aid-international @northgazaupdates2 @decolonize-solidarity
@fromjannah @jamjoob @kickedouttape @nikoco11 @neechees @heritageposts
@nibeul @communistchilchuck @laiosbians @dykesbat @sokadrawws @nikkipettt
@chloesimaginationthings @changewingwentz @chattematsu @toiletpotato @milkmanner
@buttonheart @taemincult @gazanarchive @donations-mutualaid
@artistsforpalestine @artistsforthepeople @palestineartproject @jannahpost
#vetted#important#palestinian aid#palestinian gofundme#palestinian donation#free palestine#all eyes on rafah#palestine#ceasefire now#west bank#rafah under attack#deir al balah
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When the Line between Self-Sufficiency and Sabotage Becomes Fine
Why is it that in a context of total alienation, projects that focus on self-sufficiency or going back to the land almost invariably entail a cessation of hostilities with the State and a recuperation by Capital? The answer is probably equally related to the implications of buying the land or space for oneâs autonomy, and a spiritual acceptance of the a priori alienation between person and environment.
The Mapuche struggle involves the forceful recovery of land they uncompromisingly claim as theirs, and a way of being â by this I mean a seamlessly interlocked spirituality, economy, and social organization â that declares war on the alienation between person and environment. In this way of being, there is no dividing line between gardening, home-building, natural medicine, setting fire to logging trucks, clashing with cops, sabotaging construction equipment, or blocking highways.
Self-sufficiency signifies a contraction of oneâs relationships and an avoidance of the lines of social conflict. One who is self-sufficient need not form relationships with others. But the claiming of space and the inalienability of oneâs relationship to that space asserts an expansive web of relationships that we must defend in order to truly be alive.
In my free time in Wallmapu, I learned to harvest and thresh quinoa, to kill and gut a chicken, and to gather certain wild plants. In that particular context, these were not hobbies that might eventually be put to use in a strategy of avoidance. Capitalism has been very deliberate in deskilling us, which is a way of robbing us of the possibility of intimately relating with the world around us. âRelating with the world around usâ is not a leisure activity, as the bourgeois imagination would have us believe. It does not mean (only) walking barefoot and spending time with nature, or playing games and having picnics in the park. It also means feeding ourselves, healing ourselves, housing ourselves, and a hundred other activities. Doing things directly always requires relating with other living beings rather than relating with commodities. Feeding ourselves, within an offensive practice that seizes space from the State, is not at all a form of avoidance, but an intensification of our freedom and our war on the State.
The people in Lof PaĂągihue were very clear: being able to produce their own electricity would be a powerful form of sabotage against the State. Theirs was not a case of middle class people putting solar panels on their houses, selling the surplus back to the power company, and living with a cleaner conscience. It is a war to recover their territory, to kick out the State, the capitalists, and the Western way of life. If they end their dependence on the Stateâs infrastructure, not only have they intensified their practice of independence, they have also made that state infrastructure vulnerable to attack.
It is often said that there is no outside to capitalism. This is certainly true as far as capitalist projectuality is concerned, but the statement does not truly define our counter-activity unless we accept alienation as a physical feature of reality. Where land is being retaken as a part of ourselves, building the tools and developing the lost skills that allow us to relate directly to that land and to live as a part of it constitute a practice of independence from and against capitalism.
Our freedom is not merely a blank slate or the lack of imposition by the State. Freedom must be articulated ever more intensively, through the tools, skills, worldview, medicine, historical memory, food culture, and material anchors that constitute the becoming or the embodiment of that freedom.
[1] ed. â We feel it important to mention the words of the comrade himself (Luciano Pitronello, known as âel Tortugaâ or Turtle) on this matter, addressed to his accomplice in his very first open letter from prison: âHermanx [ed. â little sibling], I want you to know that although I could never imagine the horrible things that have played with your mind or your heart [âŚ] I am never going to have to reproach you for anything, because that night it was my turn, just like in past times it had been your turn, if something happens the second person flees, so we had agreed and so it had to be, because although you might many times feel like a traitor, you are not, in this war that we decided to take on there are no words to understand us. I may never see you again, if so, good luck in everything that comes.â He lost a hand, but is now finally free.
#ally-industrial complex#anti-colonialism#critique of the left#decolonization#gender roles#Indigenous solidarity#interpersonal relationships#Mapuche#memory#privilege#repression#reskilling#Return Fire#sabotage#spirituality#wallmapu#anarchism#anarchy#anarchist society#practical anarchy#practical anarchism#resistance#autonomy#revolution#communism#anti capitalist#anti capitalism#late stage capitalism#daily posts#libraries
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For people who don't remember the 2016 Tumblr was full of Russian trolls who posed as progressive social justice blogs and urged young liberals to throw their vote away on a third party. You can read more about it here :https://www.wired.com/story/tumblr-russia-trolls-propaganda/ This camapign was extraiordinary succesful and third party voters were a key reason why Trump one( if you look at the electoral results you will see that the race was so close that if the third party votes had gone to Hillary she would have easily buried Trump) Sadly we didn't know that this was a orchestred camapign until Tumblr released the data itself and told us who the blogs were. Those were not simple spam blogs. They were pros. They knew how to talk to people, they made real posts and interacted. They tried this in 2020 but we were wary because the memories were still fresh But now thy are trying again. I just found this guy who is running the EXACT same play book as in 2016. Pretending to be a person of color , poting progresive posts while at the same time urigng everyoe to vote third party. As soon as I called him out he immedately blocked me beause he knew I outed him. So now i's up to you guys. Don't let Trump supporting Russian trolls run their psy ops here. Report en masse and get them now instead of waiting for months for tumblr to tell us they worked for Trump REPORT THIS RUSSIAN TROLL NOW. DON'T LET THEM PULL THEIR GAMES AGAIN: https://www.tumblr.com/decolonize-the-left
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None of this makes sense and just proves how little knowledge you have about any of the "examples" you gave or Hamas. Also. Katness? The avatar? Star wars? Yall are really not fighting the accusations of fandomifying the conflict.
I'm going to be very blunt:
If you condemn Hamas, then I also want you to condemn the Warsaw Ghetto Uprisings.
If you condemn Hamas, then I also want you to condemn the slaves who used violence to fight against the slavemasters.
If you condemn Hamas, then I also want you to condemn Viet Cong for using violence against literal war crimes.
If you condemn Hamas, then I also want you to condemn the Rebel Alliance for blowing up the Death Star.
If you condemn Hamas, then I also want you to condemn Katniss Everdeen for uprising against the oppressive districts.
If you condemn Hamas, then I also want you to condemn Team Avatar for all the things they did to the Fire Nation.
If you condemn Hamas, then I also want you to condemn EVERY REBELLION IN HISTORY AND FICTION THAT HAS EVER OCCURRED.
You don't get to dictate how people resist. You don't get to force your delicate western morals onto people who are oppressed.
Oppression breeds resistance. You don't get to just oppress people and then say that they are resisting their oppression "wrong." Either rally with the resistance, or stay on the sidelines while you claim that you "totally would have" sided with the resistances of the past.
#i really dont have any words left#comparing fiction to real life terrorists#israel palestine conflict#i stand with israel#israel#decolonize hamas from gaza#hamasniks
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In the Heart of Suffering: My Family in Gaza.
My family, consisting of 12 people, including 6 children, is living in torn tents that offer no protection against the harsh winter or heavy rain. Water seeps into the tents from all directions, and the cold bites at the childrenâs fragile bodies as they bathe in freezing water not by choice, but because there is no alternative.
When one of them falls ill, they suffer silently because medicine is unavailable. Even basic winter clothing is beyond reach they left everything behind when they fled from northern Gaza to escape relentless bombing. Every day, they carry water in buckets and struggle to find food amidst skyrocketing prices, while constant shelling, hunger, and fear surround them on all sides.
Help my family survive this hell. Donate if you can, or share their story so it reaches someone who can help. And if you canât, keep them in your prayers and thoughts. Your words and actions might be the light that brightens their darkest days.
Vetted by: bilal-salah0
Gaza-evacuation-funds
@timetravellingkitty @deathlonging @briarhips @dirhwangdaseul @mahoushojoe
@rhubarbspring @schoolhater @pcktknife @transmutationisms @sawasawako
@feluka @birabiroo @irhabiya @commissions4aid-international @wellwaterhysteria
@deepspaceboytoy @post-brahminism @khanger @evillesbianvillain @neechees
@mangocheesecakes @kyra45-helping-others @jezior0 @7bitter @tortiefrancis
@toiletpotato @fromjannah @omegaversereloaded @vague-humanoid @tododeku-or-bust
@aristotels @komsomolka @xinakwans @heritageposts @nibeul
@ot3 @amygdalae @ankle-beez @lonniemachin @dykesbat
@watermotif @stuckinapril @mavigator @lacecap @yugiohz
@socalgal @chilewithcarnage @ghelgheli @sayruq @northgazaupdates2
@vakarians-babe @wayneradiotv @paper-mario-wiki @rthko @decolonize-the-everything
@velvetys @3000s @punkitt-is-here @ghelgheli @feluka
@cruzwalters @yugiohz @akajustmerry @shesnake @tamamita
@opencommunion @brutaliakhoa @schoolhater @bilal-salah0 @dragondemoness .
@lapastelr0sa @victormcdicktor @murderbot @acehimbo @heliopixels
@jezior0 @turian @labutansa @thedigitalbard @imjustheretotrytohelp
@buttercuparry @newsfrom-theworld @alexander-the-alright @autisticmudkip @isa-ah
@ot3 @hazem-khalil @huckleberrycomics @heydreamchild @heydreamchild
@wintersteves @orphicdazai @transmutationisms @fatickono @meraofxebels
@dlxxv-vetted-donations >>>>
#ahmedpalestine#save đ#free đ#palestine đ#free gaza đľđ¸#free palestine đľđ¸#don't stop talking about palestine đľđ¸#save palestine đľđ¸#i stand with palestine đľđ¸#from the river to the sea đľđ¸#all eyes on rafah#support palestine#save palestine#gaza strip
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once i fix me, he's gonna miss me | joe burrowâš (part two)
part one!!! | here are the people who commented for a part two on part one @rd14
free palestine carrd đľđ¸ decolonize palestine site đľđ¸ how you can help palestine | FREE PALESTINE!
⢠â đ°đ¨đŤđ đđ¨đŽđ§đ | 12.9k (oops... sorry)
⢠â đŹđŽđŚđŚđđŤđ˛ | you and joe had spent months apart, each of you learning to live without the other.
⢠â đ°đđŤđ§đ˘đ§đ đŹ | lots and lots of angst!!! joe finding a new gf, hoe joe đ¤đ¤đ¤ BUT A HAPPY ENDINGGGG!!! YIPEEEE!!!
Seven months.
It didnât sound like a long time, not really. Less than a year. Barely two seasons. Just over half of what used to be a full calendar with himâtraining camps, game days, off-seasons that blurred together with vacations and quiet mornings in bed.
But in reality, it had been everything.
Seven months since you had packed up the life you built and left Cincinnati behind. Seven months of unlearning the habits of loving Joe Burrow, of waking up without him, of forcing yourself to stop expecting a text that never came. Seven months of figuring out who you were outside of being his.
And now, just when you had finally settled into this new version of yourself, life was pulling you back.
Back to Cincinnati. Back to the city that still had pieces of you scattered all over it. Back to him.
It wasnât about Joe.
You had spent months proving that to yourself, and you werenât about to start unraveling now. This was about you.
About the job offer that had landed in your inbox three weeks ago, the kind of offer people in sports media fought years forâan on-air analyst role with The Ringer, covering the NFL, sitting at the same table as some of the most respected voices in the industry.
It was the dream. Your dream.
And you werenât about to say no just because it happened to be in the same city where the ghost of your old life still lingered.
So, for the first time in months, you packed your bags for yourself. Not for a man. Not for a relationship.
For you.
But still, as you stared at your suitcases lined up by the door, heart pounding just a little harder than you wanted to admit, one thought lingered in the back of your mind:
What happens when he sees you again?
--
Joe spent the summer in places that never felt like home.
Hotel rooms, penthouses, beach houses that werenât hisâalways someone elseâs space, someone elseâs idea of a good time. The kind of places that smelled like overpriced perfume, spilled liquor, and bad decisions.
And for a while, that was the point.
His teammates told him this was what life was supposed to be like.
âYouâre 27, bro. You should be living.â âYouâre Joe fucking Burrow. Act like it.â âMan, you wasted all your good years locked down.â
That last one made his stomach twist. Because it didnât feel wasted.
But he didnât say that.
Instead, he let them drag him to Miami, to Vegas, to private clubs where the rules didnât apply to men like them. He let women press into him, let them murmur in his ear, let them take his hand and lead him places he wasnât sure he wanted to go.
Because that was the goal, wasnât it?
To fill the silence. To drown out the memories. To stop thinking about you.
So, he drank.
Not recklesslyânever sloppilyâbut just enough to take the edge off. Enough to let the vodka burn its way through his chest and dull the parts of him that still felt too raw.
He spent the nights doing what everyone told him he shouldâwrapped up in women he barely knew, letting them touch him, letting them call him baby in a voice that never sounded quite right.
Sometimes, in the blur of it all, he almost let himself believe he was having fun.
But then morning would come. And heâd wake up in a bed that wasnât his own, sheets tangled, a warm body beside him that felt wrong.
She would still be asleep, breathing slow and even, and Joe would stare at the ceiling, feeling the weight of something he couldnât name pressing down on his ribs. It was always the same.
Heâd lie there, his head still heavy from the night before, and tell himself this was good for him.
This was healthy. He was moving on. He was living. He was making up for lost time.
But then she would shift beside him, mumble something sleepily, and for a split second, he would forget where he was. For a split second, his body would expect you.
His arm would twitch, muscle memory almost pulling him toward youâexcept it wasnât you.
It never was. And in that moment, when the reality of it came crashing down, Joe had never felt more hollow.
So he would slip out of bed. Pull on his clothes. Leave before she woke up, before she could reach for him, before she could make him feel even emptier than he already did.
Then, like clockwork, his phone would light up with a text from one of the guys.
Round two tonight? Another night, another city, letâs run it. Burrow, weâre not letting you sit this one out.
And every time, he would hesitate. Every time, he would think about saying no. But then heâd think about what saying no meant.
Silence. Loneliness.
A bed that really felt empty. And worst of allâthoughts of you.
So instead, he would type out the same thing he always did. Iâm in.
And just like that, another night would begin. Another night of pretending. Another night of trying to convince himself that this was good for him.
That this was better than thinking about the one person who used to make him feel whole.
And the beginning of the season was always theirs.
It had been for years.
It was the one time of year where the entire world faded into the backgroundâwhere it was just the two of them, preparing for battle in the way only they knew how. Training camp, preseason, the long, grueling days where his body ached and his mind buzzed with too much informationânone of it ever felt as heavy when you were there.
Because you had made it easier. You always knew what he needed before he even had to ask.
You knew how to blend his smoothies just rightâprotein-packed but never too thick, not too sweet, not too chalky, just enough banana to hide the bitterness of the greens he hated but needed. You knew how many calories he needed to maintain weight, which meals gave him the best energy, when he needed something light and when he needed something hearty. You knew when he was too sore to get off the couch, and youâd already have an ice pack in one hand and a heating pad in the other.
You knew him. And now, you were gone.
Preseason was hell. Not just because of the training, not just because every muscle in his body burned by the time he got home, not just because he was still trying to prove he was fully back from the injuryâbut because this was the first time he was doing it without you.
For the past seven years, the start of the season had always meant you.
It meant waking up to you shaking him gently, telling him his morning shake was ready, pressing a soft kiss to his temple before he even opened his eyes. It meant coming home to meals that were already planned, already balanced, already exactly what his body needed to recover. It meant you running through the nutrition plan with him, tweaking it when necessary, doing the math so he didnât have to think about it.
It meant structure. It meant routine. It meant you making sure he was okay, even when he was too stubborn to admit when he wasnât.
Now, none of it was there. And he felt it more than ever.
--
The moment he walked into his house after practice, exhaustion hit him like a brick wall. His body was doneâhis legs sore, his back aching, his head pounding. All he wanted was to throw his bag down, take a shower, eat, and crash.
But instead, he just stood there. Because for the first time, he realized how much there was to do.
You werenât there to remind him to drink his recovery shake. You werenât there to make sure the fridge was stocked with what he needed. You werenât there to have a meal ready so he didnât have to think about it.
And fuck, he had never thought about it. Not once. Because you had always done it.
Joe sighed, rolling his shoulders, heading into the kitchen. The fridge door swung open with an empty, lifeless hum, and his stomach sank at the sight.
Nothing was prepped.
There were random ingredients, sure. Leftover takeout. Some eggs, maybe. A couple of protein bars shoved in the back. But nothing was ready. Nothing was measured, planned, easy.
And thatâs when it really hit him.
You werenât just gone. You had been holding his life together.
He shut the fridge, pressing his hands against the counter, breathing heavily through his nose. His head felt too full and too empty at the same time.
For years, he had been able to come home, sit down, and just be.
Now? Now he had to do everything himself.
Now, he had to think about what to eat, had to plan it, had to cook it. He had to wash the dishes after instead of finding them already cleaned. He had to remind himself to stretch properly, to ice his ankle, to foam roll before bed.
And it wasnât that he couldnât do it.
It was just that he had never had to before.
Because you had done it all. Because you had loved him enough to do it all. And heâ
Joe exhaled sharply, shaking his head like that could make the thoughts disappear. Like it could make the guilt settle.
But it didnât. It never did.
So he grabbed a protein bar, ate it standing up, and stared at the empty kitchen like it was mocking him. Like it was reminding him of everything he lost.
--
The morning you left Columbus, the sky was overcast, the air thick with the kind of lingering summer heat that stuck to your skin. It felt heavy, suffocating, like the world itself knew this wasnât an easy goodbye.
Your best friend stood by the trunk of your car, arms crossed, shifting her weight like she was trying not to say something sentimental that would make you both cry.
"You sure about this?" she asked, her voice softer than usual.
No. Not even a little.
But you nodded anyway, forcing a smile. âYeah.â
It wasnât a lie, not really. You were sureâabout the job, about the opportunity, about the fact that moving back to Cincinnati was the next step for you.
But that didnât mean you werenât terrified.
Because Cincinnati wasnât just another city. It wasnât just a place on the map.
It was his city.
It was where you had built a life with Joe, where every street held memories, where every turn would remind you of something you werenât sure you were ready to face.
You took a deep breath, reaching down to scratch behind Larryâs ears as she sat in her carrier, blinking up at you with wide, judgmental eyes. âGuess itâs just us now, huh?â
Your best friend let out a breathy laugh. âYeah, well, if she could talk, sheâd probably tell you this is a terrible idea.â
âShe doesnât need to talk. Sheâs been staring at me like I ruined her life since I put her in there.â
âBecause you did ruin her life. She was thriving here.â
You sighed dramatically, crouching to peer into the crate. âI get it, Larry. Youâre a city girl now. But youâll be fine.â
She flicked her tail. You took that as reluctant acceptance.
Your best friend leaned in, her voice dropping. âFor real, though. If it gets to be too muchâif you get there and you feel like you canât do it, like itâs swallowing you wholeâyou call me.â
You looked at her, something tight forming in your throat.
You had spent the last seven months healing in this apartment, in this city, with her. She had seen the worst of youâthe nights you couldnât sleep, the mornings you barely got out of bed, the moments when you swore you would never go back to Cincinnati, to that life, to the person you used to be.
But here you were.
And you werenât sure if you were proving yourself right or setting yourself up to fail.
âPromise me,â she pressed.
You swallowed hard and nodded. âI promise.â
She exhaled, reaching forward to wrap you in a tight hug. âGo be great.â
You squeezed your eyes shut, held on a little longer than necessary, and then let go.
It was time.
--
The first hour of the drive was quiet.
Larry had settled into the passenger seat, eyes half-lidded in irritation but otherwise calm, curled up on the blanket you had thrown there. The GPS said you had just over an hour to go, and the closer you got, the more your heart pounded.
It was happening.
You were actually doing this.
You were going back.
You were going back to Cincinnati, to a city that used to feel like home, but no longer did.
Going back to the restaurants you used to love, the streets you used to walk, the stadium that still felt like an extension of Joe himself.
Going back to a version of yourself you had spent seven months trying to bury.
Your hands gripped the wheel tighter.
This was a mistake.
Maybe you should turn around. Maybe this was too soon. Maybe you had done all this work just to unravel the second you saw him againâbecause you would see him again. That was inevitable.
You sucked in a breath, reaching for your phone, scrolling through your playlists with one hand until your thumb hovered over a title that made you pause.
"I Can Do It With a Broken Heart."
You hesitated.
Then, before you could talk yourself out of it, you hit play.
The first beat kicked in, and the song filled the car, the steady rhythm drowning out the anxious thoughts spiraling in your head.
âIâm so depressed, I act like itâs my birthday every day.â
You huffed out something that was half a laugh, half a scoff.
Yeah. That sounded about right.
You turned up the volume, tapping your fingers against the wheel as the song pulsed through the speakers.
You werenât going to let this break you.
You werenât going to let the fear win.
This was your life.
Not Joeâs.
Not the life you built for him.
Not the future you thought you had.
This was your fresh start.
So you sang along, let the music wash over you, let the lyrics be a reminder that you had already survived the worst part.
Now, you just had to keep going.
The first week passed in a haze.
It was the kind of week where you moved on autopilot, where you unpacked boxes without really thinking about it, where you got up early, dressed professionally, walked into work like you belonged thereâeven when people looked at you like you were some kind of open secret.
You knew what they were thinking.
Knew what they whispered when they thought you couldnât hear.
Thatâs Joe Burrowâs ex. Didnât she used to be at every Bengals event? Wonder if she got the job because of himâŚ
You ignored it.
You ignored the careful glances, the way some of your co-workers hesitated before talking to you, like they werenât sure whether to bring him up or pretend they didnât know anything.
You werenât Joe Burrowâs ex.
You were you.
And you belonged here.
You knew that.
So you held your head high, settled into the studio, studied film, took notes, prepared for your first on-air segment like your life depended on it. You threw yourself into your work, into the statistics, into the plays, into the debates about teams and formations and Super Bowl contenders.
And it helped.
For a little while.
But then you went home.
And that was when the silence hit you like a freight train.
Because this wasnât Columbus, where your best friend was always there to fill the quiet. Where you could crash on the couch and vent about your day. Where you could talk about Joe without every conversation feeling like a weight pressing down on your chest.
This was alone.
For the first time since the breakup, you were truly alone.
And God, it was loud.
The absence of Joe wasnât just in the city itselfâit was in the routine, in the things you used to do without even realizing they were because of him.
Like how you still woke up too early, your body trained to match his schedule, expecting to hear him shuffling around in the kitchen, making coffee before heading to the facility.
Except now, the kitchen was silent.
Like how you caught yourself walking toward the fridge with the muscle memory of preparing his post-practice mealâonly to stop halfway when you remembered he wasnât coming home.
Like how you reached for your phone when the Bengals played their first preseason game, fingers hovering over Joeâs contact, because for years, your first instinct was to text him after every game.
But there was nothing to say.
And maybe the worst part?
You werenât just missing Joe.
You were missing the you that existed when you were with him.
The version of yourself that felt certainâwho knew her place in the world, who belonged somewhere, who mattered to someone.
You had spent months finding yourself again, carving out your own identity, telling yourself that you didnât need him to be whole.
But now, back in Cincinnati, back in the place where he existed so loudlyâ
You werenât sure if you believed it anymore.
So you curled up on the couch, pulling Larry onto your lap, listening to the faint echoes of the city outside your window, and let the loneliness settle in.
It wasnât dramatic.
It wasnât loud.
It was just⌠empty.
And that, somehow, was worse.
--
The first game of the season was electric.
The stadium roared with life, packed with thousands of fans wearing his jersey, screaming his name, riding the high of the first Sunday of football like it was a holiday. The air was thick with anticipation, the adrenaline thrumming in his veins like a drug, the kind of high that made everything else fade into the background.
It was the kind of game where Joe felt alive.
Where every snap, every pass, every perfectly executed play made him feel like he was exactly where he was supposed to be. Where he could silence the doubts, the guilt, the quiet gnawing ache that had followed him around since the summer.
By the time the final whistle blew, and the Bengals secured their first win of the season, he was buzzing.
His teammates clapped him on the back, JaâMarr pulling him in with a grin, shouting something in his ear that was lost in the deafening noise of the stadium.
Joe was smiling. Laughing. Letting the moment consume him, letting it drown out everything else.
And then, out of instinctâout of years of routineâhe turned to the stands.
He looked for you.
Because thatâs what he always did.
After every win, his eyes found you first. No matter how crazy the stadium was, no matter how many cameras were flashing, no matter how loud the world gotâhe always, always found you.
You, standing there in the family section, wearing his jersey, waiting for him with that soft, knowing smile. You, with your hands cupped around your mouth, cheering louder than anyone else. You, who had been there since before all of this, since before the world knew his name, since before he was anything more than a college quarterback with big dreams.
You, who always made the wins feel real.
But tonight?
You werenât there.
The realization hit him like a punch to the gut, knocking the air from his lungs.
The stands blurred, the celebration around him suddenly too loud, too suffocating.
Because of course you werenât there.
You hadnât been there for months.
And still, somehow, some way, he had forgotten.
For the first time in seven months, he had let himself exist in a space where you were still his. Where you were still waiting for him, still there at the end of it all, still his person.
But you werenât.
You were gone.
And in your place, in the section where you used to stand, where you used to belongâ
Was Katie.
His girlfriend.
She was standing there, blonde hair perfect, wearing a Bengals hoodie that was probably brand new, clapping politely as she smiled down at him.
Nice. Sweet. Pretty.
Not you.
His stomach twisted.
Because Katie wasnât bad. She wasnât anything, really. Just another part of the life he had built in your absence. Something easy, something light, something that should have made him feel better but didnât.
Because she didnât know him.
Not really.
Not like you did.
She didnât know what to say to him after a loss. Didnât know how he liked his breakfast in the mornings. Didnât know the exact way he liked his shoulder massaged when the soreness became unbearable.
Didnât know him like you did.
And for the first time since convincing himself this was what moving on looked like, he wondered if he had made a mistake.
A very, very big mistake.
His hands clenched into fists.
The celebration around him felt like static, like background noise in a life he wasnât sure belonged to him anymore.
Because winning used to mean everything.
But tonight, standing in the middle of the field, looking up at the stands and seeing her instead of youâ
He had never felt more hollow.
--
For the first couple of months back in Cincinnati, you told yourself you were thriving.
You said it like a mantra, like if you repeated it enough times, it would become real. You made new friendsâreal friends, not people who only saw you as Joe Burrowâs ex, not WAGs who looked at you with thinly veiled pity, not reporters who were too polite to ask what really happened.
They were normal. Kind. Fun. The kind of girls who made you laugh so hard your stomach hurt, who invited you to wine nights and didnât bring up Joe once. With them, you could pretend that Cincinnati wasnât laced with ghosts of your old life. You could breathe.
You picked up new hobbies.
You took a pilates class, went to farmerâs markets on Sundays, tried baking even though you burned half the things you made. You started running againânot because Joe had told you once that he liked how focused you looked when you ran, but because you liked the way it made you feel.
You tried to redefine football as yours.
Not Joeâs.
Yours.
You threw yourself into your job, memorized rosters, studied plays, made sure you knew everything about the game so that when you sat in that studio, behind that microphone, no one could say you got this job because of him.
And for a while, it worked.
For a while, you really did feel like you were thriving.
But then, one afternoon, it all came crashing down.
â
It was a normal day at work. Normal segment. Normal conversation.
Until it wasnât.
You were on air, talking through some Week 4 analysis, debating quarterback performances with your co-host, when he said it.
Casual. Offhand. Like it wasnât about to shatter you completely.
"Well, I guess we can trust your take on Joe Burrowâyou did have a front-row seat for a long time."
The words landed like a gut punch.
Your stomach clenched, a prickle of heat rising at the back of your neck.
You forced a laugh. A quick, easy, I'm completely unbothered laugh.
"Guess so," you said, brushing it off, moving on like it was nothing.
But inside, you were shaking.
Your hands under the desk. Your breath. Your entire body.
You spent the rest of the segment in autopilot, nodding at the right moments, forcing yourself to focus on the words, on the script, on anything but the feeling of your past creeping into a space that was supposed to be yours.
And the second the cameras cut, you were gone.
You barely made it to your car before it hit you.
The unraveling.
You collapsed into the driverâs seat, fingers gripping the steering wheel so tight they ached, and thenâ
You broke.
It wasnât quiet.
It wasnât controlled.
It was months of holding it together, of telling yourself you were fine, of pretending you had rebuilt yourself from the ground upâonly to realize you had been balancing on a fault line the entire time.
The sobs came fast, chest-heaving, breathless.
You had spent so long trying to reclaim Cincinnati, trying to convince yourself that you werenât just a remnant of Joe Burrowâs lifeâthat you could exist here, in this city, in this job, as your own person.
But the truth was, he was everywhere.
And right now, in this moment, you werenât sure if you were anything without him.
Because Joe was the only person who had ever truly known you.
He knew the way your nose scrunched when you concentrated, the way you got irrationally angry when you lost at board games, the way you never finished a drink, always leaving the last sip untouched.
He knew your moods before you did.
He knew how you got quiet when you were sad, how you hated crying in front of people, how you avoided confrontation until you couldnât anymoreâuntil it bubbled over in sharp words and slammed doors.
He knew things about you that you didnât even know about yourself.
Like how you sometimes clenched your jaw in your sleep when you were anxious. Like how you had a habit of counting your steps when you walked, not even realizing it.
Like how, right now, you would be breaking down in your car, gripping the steering wheel, feeling completely and utterly lostâand the only person who could make it better was him.
But he wasnât here.
And that was the worst part of all.
--
December used to be your favorite month.
The lights, the music, the warmth of it all. The way the whole world seemed to slow down, wrapped in twinkling lights and the soft hum of Christmas songs playing in the background.
But mostly, December meant him. It meant Joe.
His birthday, tucked right in the start of the holiday season, had always been something sacred to you. It was your thingâthe one time of year where you could spoil him without him complaining, where you could go all out, where you could make sure he felt as loved as he made you feel every other day of the year.
You had never held back.
You would spend months planningâpicking out the perfect gifts, arranging surprise dinners, making sure every little detail was right. One year, you got him that limited-edition Rolex he had been eyeing but never pulled the trigger on. Another year, you rented out a private cabin in the mountains for just the two of you, knowing he needed to escape the chaos of football for a few days.
Last yearâGod, last yearâyou had thrown him a surprise party with all of his friends and family. He had kissed you at the end of the night, hands cupping your face, murmuring against your lips, How do you always know exactly what I want?
Because you knew him. Because you had loved him.
And now, here you were.
A year later. A year without him.
And December didnât feel magical anymore.
You tried. You really tried.
You put up the tree in your apartment, even though it was smaller than the one you used to decorate with him. You bought yourself Christmas candles, filled your space with the smell of cinnamon and pine, played holiday music when you cooked.
But it all felt wrong.
Because December had always been his month, too. It wasnât just the holiday seasonâit was the anniversary of the last time you had ever been his.
The breakup had happened right after his birthday.
It had been cold, the city wrapped in the kind of sharp, biting winter that made everything feel harsher. And in a way, it had been fittingâbecause that night, when Joe had walked out, when the door had shut behind him, the warmth had left your life, too.
And now, a full year later, it was still gone.
His birthday came and went. You didnât text him. Didnât even let yourself think about what he might be doing, whether he was happy, whether he even thought about you at all.
But your body knew.
You woke up that morning feeling it like a weight in your chest, like something pressing down on your ribs. You didnât check your phone, didnât open Instagram, didnât give yourself the chance to see what the world was saying about him.
Because it wasnât your place anymore. Because you werenât the person celebrating with him.
Because no matter how much time passed, no matter how many times you told yourself that you were okay, December would always be the cruelest reminder that you werenât.
That you had once been his world. And now, you were nothing.
You spent Christmas with your best friend, and it should have been nice. It was nice. Warm. Cozy. The kind of Christmas you had always loved.
But it wasnât his family.
It wasnât his mom, who had always pulled you into a hug the second you walked through the door. It wasnât his dad, who would slip you a knowing smile when Joe snuck a hand around your waist at dinner. It wasnât his brothers, teasing you like you were already part of the family.
And it wasnât him.
It wasnât Joe, pulling you against him on the couch, wrapping you in one of his hoodies, pressing a lazy kiss to your temple. It wasnât his voice murmuring, Merry Christmas, baby, in the quiet, sleepy warmth of the morning.
It wasnât your life. Not anymore.
So, you smiled. You opened presents. You drank hot chocolate and laughed at dumb Christmas movies and let yourself pretend that this was enough.
But when you got home that night, alone in your apartment, staring at your Christmas tree that suddenly felt too big, you let the truth sink in.
December without him was unbearable. And you werenât sure if it would ever get easier.
--
You had almost convinced yourself that you were fine.
Almost.
The past year had been a cycleâof loss, of healing, of learning how to be you again. But tonight? Tonight, you felt like you had finally gotten there.
You had put effort into your outfit, just because you wanted to. You werenât dressing for anyone but yourself, werenât trying to impress Joe or prove something to anyone. You had slipped into a sleek, fitted black dress, let your new friends style your hair in soft waves, even wore that deep red lipstick that had always made you feel untouchable.
And when you stepped out of your car in front of the restaurant, that new Chanel bag resting effortlessly on your shoulder, you felt good.
Not just okay. Good. Like yourself.
Or at least, the version of you that wasnât still haunted by him.
--
Joe had seen you first.
And it hit him like a fucking freight train.
It wasnât just the shock of seeing youâit was how he saw you. It was the way you walked into the restaurant, laughing at something one of your coworkers had said, your smile easy, effortless, real. It was the way you carried yourself, exuding that same quiet confidence that had once made him fall for you in the first place.
And God, you looked good. Not just good. Stunning.
Like you had stepped right out of a dream, wearing that black dress like it had been made for you, your hair falling in perfect waves, that red lipstick making his mouth go dry.
For a second, Joe forgot how to breathe. Because this was the first time he had seen you in a year. And somehow, you looked okay.
Without him.
The nausea hit immediately.
Because the last time he had seen youâreally seen youâyou had been crying. You had been begging him to fight for you, to stay, to want you enough to make it work. And now, a year later, you werenât the woman who had walked away from him, heartbroken and lost.
You were this. Whole. Beautiful. Radiant.
Like he had never even existed in your world.
You didnât see Joe right away.
Your coworkers were leading the way to your table, your heels clicking against the polished floors, your heart light in a way it hadnât been in a long time. You were okay. You were doing this. You were thriving.
Until your stomach dropped. Because suddenly, you felt it.
That indescribable feelingâthe one that came when someone was watching you. And when you turned your head, your breath caught in your throat.
Because he was there.
Joe.
Sitting at a table near the back of the restaurant, not alone. You blinked. Your heart lurched. Your ears started ringing. He had a girlfriend.
You didnât even know he had moved on.
And yet, here he was, sitting across from some blondeâlong hair, perfect makeup, the kind of effortless beauty that made your stomach twist in a way you hated.
Because Joe wasnât supposed to move on.
Not when you were still here. Not when you had spent the past year rebuilding yourself just to survive the loss of him. And now, in a single second, everything inside you cracked.
You felt sick.
Not because you wanted him back. But because, for the first time, you were faced with the reality that he had built a life that no longer included you.
That the man you had once known better than anyoneâthe man you had loved with everything you hadâwas now sitting across from another woman.
That you werenât his anymore.
Joe watched the realization hit you.
Watched the way your face fell, your eyes widening slightly, your body stiffening like you had just been punched in the stomach. And suddenly, he hated himself.
Because you looked like youâstrong, composed, pulled togetherâbut in that brief second, he saw it. That crack in the armor. That hurt.
And fuck, fuck, he wanted to fix it.
Because the truth was, he hadnât moved on.
Not really. Not in the way that mattered.
Yeah, Katie was nice. Yeah, she looked good on his arm. But she didnât know him. She didnât know what he needed after a bad game, didnât know the songs that made him think of home, didnât know that he couldnât sleep with the TV on because the noise made his brain race.
She wasnât you.
And as much as he had tried to convince himself that this was rightâthat you were the past, that this was his futureâhe couldnât lie to himself anymore.
Because seeing you here, standing across the room, looking like this, feeling like this, made him realize something.
He didnât want this life without you. And for the first time in a year, Joe felt something worse than heartbreak.
He felt regret. And Joe could feel Katie watching him.
She had been talkingâsomething about how the steak wasnât as good as the place she went to in LAâbut he hadnât heard a word. His eyes were locked on you.
On the way your body tensed, on the flicker of hurt that flashed across your face before you smoothed it over like it was nothing. On the way your fingers twitched at your side like you didnât know what to do with them.
Like you wanted to run. And fuck, he hated that.
Hated that he was the reason you looked like that. Hated that even after a year, he could still hurt you just by existing. Then he felt it.
Katieâs hand sliding up his arm, curling around his bicep, nails digging in slightly as she pressed herself closer. She knew.
Of course she knew.
He hadnât talked about you muchâat least, not in detailâbut she wasnât stupid. She knew you had been important. That you had been in his life for longer than most people had even known his name.
And now, here you were. The ghost she had probably been waiting to meet.
"Joe," she said, sweet but pointed, her voice breaking through his haze. "You okay?"
Her fingers squeezed his arm. He barely resisted the urge to shake her off. He was so close to losing it.
He could feel his patience hanging on by a thread, could feel the way his body was coiled tight, his chest aching with something he didnât want to feel.
Because it was his late birthday dinner. His friends were here. He was supposed to be happy. But all he could think about was you. And how you were standing there, looking like that, looking like everything he had ever wanted and everything he had already lost.
He pulled his arm from Katieâs grip as casually as he could, pretending to adjust his watch.
"Yeah, I'm fine," he muttered.
But he wasnât. Not even close.
Because every second that passed, the more wrong this felt. The more suffocating the entire situation became.
The dinner had already been irritatingâhis friends were drunk, the restaurant was too loud, and Katie had spent half the night making passive comments about how he never posted her, about how she just wanted to feel special.
And now, this? Now, you were here?
It was like some kind of cruel joke.
Joe felt like the room was closing in on him.
The sounds of the restaurantâthe chatter, the clinking glasses, the faint hum of music in the backgroundâblurred into nothing, white noise against the sharp, singular reality of you.
Standing there. Looking like that. And worseâlooking like you didnât need him anymore.
That realization settled deep, lodged somewhere between his ribs, pressing down like a weight he couldnât shake.
His fingers twitched in his lap. His knee bounced once before he forced it to stop. He was trying, really fucking trying, to play it cool, to keep his face neutral, to ignore the way his body had tensed the second he saw you walk in.
Because this wasnât supposed to happen.
He wasnât supposed to see you like thisâunexpectedly, in a crowded restaurant, after a year of living separate lives. He had told himself that when it happened, it wouldnât matter. That by the time he saw you again, heâd be fine. That whatever you two had been, whatever had been left unsaid, whatever this was, it wouldnât affect him anymore.
But he had been wrong.
Because seeing you nowâstanding there in that black dress, your hair falling over your shoulders in that soft, effortless way he used to push his fingers through when you were tired, your lips painted that deep shade of red that had always driven him insaneâhe felt like his entire body was betraying him.
His stomach clenched. His throat went dry.
Because for a split second, before his brain caught up, before reality sunk its teeth into him, he had expected you to walk toward him.
Like you always had. Like you were supposed to. Like this was still your moment, your ritual, your life together.
And then, just as quickly, he saw itâthe way your shoulders stiffened, the way your fingers curled slightly at your sides, the way your lips parted just barely before pressing into a tight line.
The way your hands shook.
No one else would have noticed. But he did.
Because he had spent years learning you, memorizing you, knowing every single tell, every little habit, every reaction before you even knew you were having one.
And that? That fucked him up the most. Because it meant this hurt you, too.
It meant you werenât indifferent. It meant that even after a full year, he still affected you. And that should have made him feel better.
But it didnât.
Because the way you had reacted wasnât the way you used to. There was no fond exasperation, no teasing smirk, no warmth in your expression.
It was shock. Discomfort.
Like you didnât want to be here. Like he was the thing making you feel sick.
And the worst part? He knew he had no right to be hurt by that. Because he had done this. He was the one who had walked away first. He was the one who had let you go.
And yet, even knowing that, even with the weight of that truth pressing down on him, he still felt something ugly coil in his chest at the thought of you not caring at all.
At the thought of you moving on without him, just as much as he had triedâand failedâto move on without you. He exhaled sharply, dragging a hand over his face. His skin felt too tight, his pulse hammering in his ears, and thenâKatie.
Katie, who was still gripping his arm, nails pressing into his sleeve like a silent claim, like she knew. Like she could feel the shift in his body, the way all of his attention, all of his focus, had zeroed in on you.
And then, as if to confirm it, she pulled herself closer, her chin tilting up, her lips curling into something sweet but firm.
"Joe," she murmured, her voice just loud enough for him to hear over the hum of the restaurant, "youâre all tense. Relax, baby."
Joe clenched his jaw. Because now? Now, it wasnât just about you being here. Now, it was about this.
About the fact that he had spent the last year convincing himself that thisâKatie, this relationship, this new lifeâwas what he needed. That this was how he moved forward. That this was the best thing for him.
But the second you walked into the room, it had all come crashing down.
And when Katie pressed even closer, her hand sliding down his arm, her fingers curling into his, something in him snapped. Not visibly. Not obviously.
But he felt it.
Because for the first time in months, maybe even the first time since the breakup, he wanted out.
Out of this night. Out of this restaurant. Out of this version of his life where you werenât in it.
But his friends were here. His teammates. People were watching. So instead, he inhaled sharply through his nose, casually slipping his fingers from Katieâs grip under the guise of adjusting his watch.
"Yeah," he muttered, voice tight. "Iâm fine."
But he wasnât. Not even close.
Because when he glanced up again, when his eyes found you across the restaurant, he saw the moment you turned to your coworkers and muttered something under your breath, forcing a smile that didnât quite reach your eyes.
Saw the way you inhaled deeply, steeling yourself, before turning on your heel and walking toward your table like he wasnât even there.
Like he didnât exist. And that?
That hurt worse than anything.
--
You had spent a year healing.
A year rebuilding yourself, re-learning how to exist outside of him, re-training your mind to stop associating every little thing with Joe Burrow. A year convincing yourself that you were okay, that you were better, that you had made it through the worst of it.
And then, in a single moment, it all shattered.
Because he was here. Not just hereâhere with her.
You felt it before you even saw him. That undeniable shift in the air, the creeping sensation of familiarity that made your breath catch in your throat. And then, when your eyes finally landed on himâon Joeâit felt like something inside you cracked open, raw and bleeding.
Because he wasnât alone. He had a girlfriend. And it wasnât just that. It was how he looked.
Relaxed. Unbothered. Like the past year hadnât touched him the way it had ruined you. Like he had moved on so seamlessly, so effortlessly, while you had spent sleepless nights trying to pick up the pieces of yourself that he had left behind.
And maybe the worst part?
He looked happy.
Not the kind of happiness you had memorizedâthe quiet, real, content kind that came when he let himself breathe around you. Not the kind of happiness that was soft and easy, that came from forehead kisses in the morning and whispered inside jokes.
No, this was performative.
This was the kind of happiness you pretended to have when you were trying to convince everyoneâincluding yourselfâthat you were fine.
And yet, even knowing that, even recognizing that this wasnât real, it still hit you like a knife between the ribs. Because while you had spent the last year trying to be better, trying to move forward, Joe had spent it trying to erase you.
Like you never existed. Like the seven years you had spent together were just some forgettable chapter in his life, one he could close and move on from without looking back.
And that? That was unbearable.
Your heart pounded against your ribs, your palms damp as you curled your fingers into fists under the table. You felt like you were spiraling, like you were seconds away from breaking right here, in the middle of this crowded restaurant, in front of everyone.
No. No, no, no.
You refused. You had spent too long putting yourself back together just to fall apart now. So you inhaled sharply, forcing a small, tight smile as you pushed your chair back.
Your coworkers looked up, brows furrowed.
âYou okay?â one of them asked.
You nodded, already reaching for your bag, voice light, too casual. âYeah, I justâugh, I think something I ate earlier isnât sitting right. Iâm gonna head out.â
They nodded, accepting the excuse easily, offering quick well wishes as you grabbed your things and turned for the door. And you didnât look back.
Not once. Not even when you felt the weight of his gaze burning into your back. Not even when every single step felt like it was dragging you further away from the life you had once lived with him.
Not even when, for the first time in a long time, you realized that no matter how much you had tried to heal, there were some wounds that time just couldnât fix.
Joe watched you leave, and something inside him snapped.
It happened fast. One second, you were there, and the next, you were gone, slipping through the restaurant like you couldnât get out fast enough. And fuckâfuck, he hated that.
Hated that you looked right at him and then turned away. Hated that you had left, just like that, without even acknowledging him.
Like he was nothing. Like he had never existed in your life, either.
It made his hands twitch, made his jaw tighten, made his stomach coil with something sharp and awful and unbearable.
It made him move.
He barely heard Katie calling his name. Barely registered the way his friends were still laughing, still drinking, still living in a reality where everything was normal.
Because nothing was normal. Nothing had been normal since you had walked out of his life. And for the first time in a year, Joe didnât fight it.
Didnât push it down. Didnât try to convince himself that he was fine. Instead, he stood up, threw some cash on the table, and went after you.
Joe pushed through the restaurant doors just in time to see your taillights disappear into the night.
Gone.
Just like that.
And it felt like he was right back there againâstanding in the middle of your living room, hands shaking, heart in his throat, watching as you begged him to just say something. Just fight for you. Just be the man you needed him to be.
But he hadnât. He had let you go. And now, a year later, he had done it all over again.
His chest ached, his ribs felt too tight, his pulse was hammering so loud in his ears that he barely heard Katie calling his name behind him.
But then she touched himâher fingers curling around his wrist, her voice dripping with confusion and irritation.
"Joe, what the hell was that?"
He ripped his arm away so fast that she stumbled back a step.
"Are you serious right now?" His voice was rough, raw, his body vibrating with something he couldnât contain anymore.
Katie scoffed, crossing her arms. "Yeah, I am serious. You just humiliated me in there! You followed your ex-girlfriend out of a restaurant when I was right thereâon your birthday dinner, Joe."
She said it like it mattered. Like any of this fucking mattered. Like this wasnât the single worst night of his life. Like he cared.
Joe let out a sharp, humorless laugh, dragging a hand down his face, feeling like he could burst out of his own skin.
"Jesus Christ, Katie," he muttered. "You knew. You always fucking knew."
Her eyes narrowed. "Knew what?"
"That thisâusâwas nothing." His voice cracked, but he didnât care. He couldnât care. His hands were shaking, his chest felt too fucking tight, and suddenly, everything came out. "You knew I was never over her. You knew you were neverânever fucking her."
Katie flinched like he had slapped her. And maybe, in a way, he had.
Because he never said it. Never admitted it. Never acknowledged the fact that he had spent the past year trying to force himself to be okay, to be normal, to be the guy who could move on.
But it had always been bullshit. It had always been a lie. Because he had been living in a fucking delusion thinking that he could be with someone who wasnât you.
And now? Now, he was standing outside a restaurant, watching the only woman he had ever truly loved drive away from him again, and he felt like he was being ripped in half.
Katieâs eyes were burning. She was angry, but worseâshe looked humiliated.
"You are such a fucking asshole," she spat. "You let me thinkâ" She cut herself off, shaking her head, biting the inside of her cheek before exhaling sharply. "You know what? Fuck you, Joe."
He barely reacted. Because nothing she said, nothing she could say, would make him feel worse than he already did.
He was a fucking mess.
A fucking idiot. A fucking coward.
"You need to go," he muttered, voice hoarse.
Katie huffed out a bitter laugh. "Gladly."
He pulled out his phone, tapped the Uber app with shaking fingers, ordered her a ride, and barely looked at her as he shoved his hands in his pockets and turned away.
She scoffed. "Seriously? Youâre not even gonna drive me home?"
Joe clenched his jaw, staring down at the pavement. "I canât."
And that was the truth. Because if he got in his car right now, he knew where he was going.
He didnât remember the drive. Didnât remember putting the car in gear, didnât remember making the turns, didnât remember how his foot even got on the gas.
One second, he was standing in the cold outside the restaurant, and the nextâ
He was here.
In front of your apartment complex.
The one he only knew about because of some casual conversation in the locker room, when one of his teammates had mentioned running into you near downtown.
He hadnât meant to come here. Hadnât thought about coming here. But his hands were gripping the steering wheel, his breath was uneven, and he was here.
His knuckles were white. His mind was blank. His heart was breaking all over again.
And for the first time in his life, Joe Burrow didnât know what the fuck to do.
--
Joe stood outside your door, heart hammering against his ribs, hands curled into fists at his sides, and for the first time in his entire life, he felt like he understood.
All of it.
The songs, the poems, the movies that had once felt dramatic, exaggerated, over the top. The grand gestures, the desperate pleas, the kind of heartbreak that knocked a man to his knees.
Because thisâthisâwas the lowest he had ever been.
Worse than losing a game. Worse than getting injured. Worse than anything he had ever experienced. Because he had lost you. And he couldn't live like this anymore.
Couldnât keep pretending that he was fine, that he had moved on, that he didnât miss you every single second of every single day. Because the truth was, he did.
He missed everything.
Missed the way your voice sounded in the morning, still laced with sleep, soft and warm and home. Missed the smell of your shampoo when you curled against his chest. Missed your laugh, your stupid little quirks, the way you always knew exactly what he needed before he even said a word.
He missed loving you. And he missed being loved by you.
Because no oneânot Katie, not any of the women who had tried to take your place, not a single person in the past yearâhad ever come close to what you were to him.
And maybe it had taken him too long to realize it. Maybe he had been too fucking stupid, too proud, too scared to fight for you when he should have.
But he wasnât going to make that mistake again.
So before he could talk himself out of it, before the fear could win, before he could convince himself that he had already ruined everything beyond repairâ
He knocked.
The sound echoed in the quiet of the night, and for a second, all he could hear was the deafening thud of his own heartbeat.
Thenâ
The lock clicked, the door creaked open.
And there you were.
Standing in front of him, still in that black dress, your hair a little messier now, your eyes red-rimmed, like you had spent the last hour doing exactly what he had been doingâfalling apart.
Joe felt something crack inside him.
Because you looked just as broken as he felt.
And before you could say anything, before you could slam the door in his face, before you could tell him to leaveâ
He broke.
âIââ His voice cracked, and suddenly, he couldnât hold it in anymore. It all came outârushed, jumbled, messy, barely coherent, but real.
âI canâtâfuck, I donât even know where to start. IâI donât know how to make this right, I donât even know if I can, but I have to try because I canâtââ His breath hitched, his hands shaking at his sides, tears burning his eyes as he forced the words out. ��I canât fucking do this anymore. I canât keep waking up without you. I canât keep pretending that Iâm okay when Iâm not. When I havenât been since the second you walked away.â
You didnât move. Didnât say a word. Just stared at him, wide-eyed, lips parted slightly, like you werenât sure if this was real.
But Joe couldnât stop. Because if he did, if he gave himself a second to think, he might break down completely.
So he just kept going.
âI was a fucking idiot,â he choked out. âIâI should have fought for you. I should have been the man you needed. I should haveâfuckâI should have never let you think for a second that you werenât the most important thing in my life. Because you were. You still are.â
A tear slipped down his cheek, and he didnât even try to stop it.
âI miss you,â he whispered, voice shaking. âI miss you so much that I donât know how toâhow to breathe without you. I donât even know who I am without you.â
His throat was closing up, his chest heaving, his heart fucking shattering, and all he wantedâall he wantedâwas to reach out, to touch you, to hold you, to show you how sorry he was.
But he couldnât.
Not yet. Because this was your decision now. So he just stood there, completely open, completely raw, completely yours, and waited.
Waited for you to slam the door in his face. Waited for you to tell him that he was too late. Waited for you to break his heart all over again.
But there it was againâthat ache.
That deep, unbearable, all-consuming ache that only Joe Burrow had ever been able to pull from you. That had always been the problem, hadnât it? That no matter how much he had hurt you, no matter how much you had tried to move on, he was still Joe.
He was still your Joe.
And now, he was standing in front of you, breaking apart at the seams, giving you everything he should have given you a year ago. His eyes were glassy, his breath uneven, his entire body taut like he was waiting for you to destroy him.
And you could have.
You could have slammed the door in his face. You could have walked away, left him out in the cold, given him a taste of his own medicine.
But you didnât.
Because the truth was, you had never stopped loving him.
And before you could second-guess yourself, before your mind could catch up with your heart, you stepped forward and pulled him in.
The second your arms wrapped around him, Joe broke.
A sharp breath shuddered out of him as he buried his face into your hair, his body sinking against yours like he had been waiting for this moment for so longâlike he had been starving for this.
His arms circled you, strong and desperate, his hands gripping your waist like he was afraid to let go, like he needed to hold onto you to keep himself standing.
âIâm so sorry,â he whispered into your hair, his voice cracked and raw. âIâm so fucking sorry.â
You squeezed your eyes shut, pressing your face into his chest, your fingers digging into the fabric of his hoodie as your tears finally spilled over.
Because fuck.
This was the first time in a year that you had felt this. The warmth. The safety. The rightness of being in his arms.
You hated how good it still felt. How much you still wanted it.
Joe tightened his grip, his arms pressing you closer, his body trembling slightly as he mumbled more apologies, more I should have fought for you, I should have never let you go, I should have neverâ
You pulled back slightly, just enough to look up at him.
And for the first time in a year, you really looked at him.
His face was different. A little more tired, a little more worn, his jaw sharper, his cheekbones more defined, but his eyesâhis eyesâwere still the same. Still that impossible shade of blue, still holding that same intensity, that same Joe-ness that had always made you weak.
And suddenly, that was all you needed.
All the months of heartbreak, all the lonely nights, all the painâit all blurred for just a moment. Because the only thing that mattered was him.
And then, you let him inside.
Joe looked around, taking in your apartment, the newness of it, the little things that werenât his, that werenât yours and his.
And then, finally, you both sat on the couch.
There was no space between youâhis thigh pressed against yours, his hands twitching like he wanted to reach for you but didnât know if he was allowed to.
You exhaled shakily, forcing yourself to sit up straighter, forcing yourself to speak.
Because if he was here, if he was really going to do this, he needed to hear everything. He needed to understand what he had done.
So you told him. You told him everything.
âYou broke me, Joe.â Your voice was quiet, but firm. âYou really, really broke me.â
Joe inhaled sharply, like the words physically hurt him.
âI spent monthsâmonthsâtrying to figure out what I did wrong,â you continued, your throat tightening. âTrying to understand why I wasnât enough for you. Why you couldnât just try. Why you let me walk away when I was begging you to fight for me.â
Joeâs head dropped into his hands, his elbows resting on his knees. His breathing was uneven, like he was barely holding it together.
You swallowed hard, wiping at your cheek. âI had to learn how to exist without you. And it was the hardest thing Iâve ever done.â
Joe let out a slow, ragged breath. âI know.â
âNo, you donât.â Your voice cracked, your hands gripping your knees. âBecause while I was trying to survive losing you, you were out thereââ You hesitated, shaking your head, trying to keep yourself from spiraling. âYou were living. You were drinking, partying, fucking around with people who werenât me. You had a girlfriend.â
Joe flinched, his jaw tightening. âShe was nothing.â
âThatâs not the point, Joe.â
His shoulders slumped, defeated. âI know.â
You blinked, breathing through the sharp ache in your chest. âIâm not gonna sit here and pretend like I havenât thought about this moment a million times,â you admitted, voice softer now. âBecause I have. But if you think Iâm just gonna let you back in, like none of it ever happened, youâre wrong.â
Joe sat up, nodding, his hands clasped together tightly. âI donât expect that,â he said, voice low but steady. âI donât expect anything. But Iââ He let out a heavy exhale, running a hand through his hair. âI need you to know that I never stopped loving you.â
Your heart clenched.
Joe turned to face you fully, his knee bumping yours, his expression desperate and real and so fucking raw.
âI never stopped, not for a second,â he said, his voice thick with emotion. âI thought I could live without you. I thought I could move on, that I could distract myself, that I could convince myself that I made the right choice. But I didnât.â His hands curled into fists. âI ruined the best fucking thing that ever happened to me.â
Your chest felt like it was being squeezed, your body so tired of carrying all this pain.
Joe swallowed hard. âI will do anything to make this right. Anything.â His eyes were pleading now, his hands twitching like he wanted to reach for you. âBut you have to tell me how.â
You hesitated, inhaling deeply, your fingers twisting in your lap. And then, finally, you said it.
âYou have to try.â
Joe nodded instantly, like there was no hesitation, no doubt, no fear left in him. âI will.â
But you werenât finished.
âIâm not just gonna let you back in.â You met his gaze, steady despite the storm inside you. âI need you to prove that you mean it. That this isnât just guilt, or nostalgia, or regret.â
Joe didnât blink. âI know.â
âIâm serious, Joe. Iâm not gonna be your safety net. Iâm not just something you can come back to because youâre lonely. I need you to prove that this time, youâre not gonna leave when things get hard.â
Joe shifted forward, his voice so sure, so certain.
âI wonât.â
And for the first time in a year, you let yourself believe that maybeâjust maybeâthere was still something left to fight for.
The next few weeks felt new.
Not in the way falling in love for the first time doesâfull of naive excitement, full of the rush of this is forever without ever questioning what forever actually means.
This was different.
This was love with edges, love with history, love that had been broken down to its very foundation and rebuilt with hands that knew how fragile it was.
You and Joe didnât fall back into old habits, didnât slip into the comfort of what once was. Because what you had before hadnât worked, and maybe that was the point.
Maybe this was how it was supposed to be.
You werenât together every second of every day. You werenât just Joeâs girlfriend anymore. And maybe that was exactly what you had needed all along.
Joe never stopped trying.
He took you on real dates again, ones that werenât just convenient dinners after practice, but ones he plannedâa private table at your favorite restaurant, a weekend getaway, tickets to that concert you had mentioned in passing months ago.
He brought you presentsânot extravagant, expensive gifts, but things that showed he listened to you. The signed first edition of that book youâd been searching for, the rare vintage jersey you casually mentioned once, the perfume you used to wear back in college but stopped because you thought it was discontinued.
He gave you space when you needed it. And when you talked, he listened.
Really listened.
And that gave you hope. Because this? This was the old Joe.
The one who had loved you before the fame, before the pressure, before the weight of the world had sat heavy on his shoulders. The one who had once promised you the world and had meant every word.
And maybeâjust maybeâthis time, he would keep that promise.
And Joe had never been happier.
He hadnât realized what he had until he lost it. Until he spent a year trying to pretend like life without you was still life at all. And now that he had you back, he would never, ever lose you again.
So he did what he should have done the first time.
He showed up for you. For everything.
For your job, which he saw now wasnât just something you did, but something you loved, something you were good at. He watched every segment, sent you texts after each one, grinned when you debated your co-hosts on-air like you were born for this.
For your hobbies, the ones you had picked up when he wasnât aroundâreading late at night, running at sunrise, perfecting your French braiding skills just because you could. He watched you bloom into a version of yourself he hadnât seen in years.
And he realizedâthis was you.
The you that had existed before the NFL, before the noise, before the expectations. And fuck, he had missed you.
Not the girlfriend who had once made his life so seamless, so easy, so comfortable.
But you.
The woman who never let anyone take her for granted. The woman who had built a life outside of him. The woman who had once loved him enough to let him go when she realized he wasnât ready to love her the way she deserved.
Joe had spent years thinking he wanted someone who fit perfectly into his life. But the truth was, he didnât want a trophy wife.
And you had never wanted to be one.
He wanted this. You, with your own ambitions, your own life, your own dreams.
And now, he had you back. Not because you needed him.
But because you had chosen him.
And he would spend the rest of his life proving that he was worth that choice.
--
Three months had passed, and somehow, this felt normal again.
Not in the way it once hadânot in the suffocating, all-consuming way where your life revolved around Joe and his schedule.
This was better.
This was right.
And tonight, for the first time in over a year, you were his date to an NFL event. The NFL Honors, to be exact. The kind of night that used to feel like pressure, like you had to be perfect, like you were a reflection of him rather than your own person.
But not this time.
This time, it was just a date. A night out. A moment to celebrate him and everything he had fought to reclaim this season.
You would have been excited, had it not been for the fact that you were currently doing your makeup in a moving vehicle.
âYouâre gonna stab yourself in the eye with that thing,â Joe mused, eyes flicking to you in the passenger seat as you struggled to apply mascara.
âI wouldnât have to if someone had given me more time to get ready,â you muttered, carefully swiping the wand through your lashes.
Joe scoffed, gripping the steering wheel a little tighter. âAre you kidding me? You literally had hours. I was ready thirty minutes before I even came to get you.â
You rolled your eyes, tilting your head back for another coat. âYeah, well, some of us have more to do than just put on a suit and fix our precious curls.â
Joe smirked, barely holding back a laugh. âYou love my curls.â
You ignored him, reaching for your lip liner, only to fumble and drop it between your seat and the center console.
âFuck,â you hissed, shifting to try and reach it.
Joe took the opportunity immediately. âDamn, you that excited for tonight?â
You groaned, pressing your head back against the seat in defeat. âJoe, shut up.â
âIâm just saying,â he mused, one hand on the wheel, the other casually adjusting his watch, looking way too pleased with himself. âAll dressed up, sitting next to me, getting flustered⌠You sure itâs the event youâre excited for?â
You turned to glare at him, your face already burning, and the second he saw itâthat blushâhe grinned.
Like he had just won the fucking Super Bowl.
Like making you blush had been his goal all along.
And honestly? Knowing Joe, it probably had been.
âGod, youâre so annoying,â you muttered, arms crossed.
Joe reached over and gave your thigh a small squeeze before returning his hand to the wheel, still grinning. âYeah, but you love it.â
And the worst part?
You did.
You knew he was going to win before they even announced it.
There had been a lot of speculation, sure, but there was no doubt in your mind.
No one had fought harder than Joe. No one had come back from a worse season to prove himself the way he had.
So when they called his nameâJoe Burrow, Comeback Player of the Yearâyou barely heard the crowd over the sound of your own excitement.
You were on your feet in an instant, clapping, beaming, so proud.
And when he turned toward you before heading to the stage, his hand brushing against yours in a silent moment of acknowledgment, your heart clenched in the best way.
This was his moment.
But you were his person.
â
Joe took the stage, adjusting the mic, the gold trophy shining under the lights.
âUhâwow,â he started, shaking his head slightly, his tongue swiping over his bottom lip, the way he always did when he was trying to gather his thoughts.
The crowd laughed, and he let out a small exhale, gripping the trophy a little tighter.
âIâm not gonna stand up here and act like this season was easy,â he admitted, his voice steady but raw, real. âIt wasnât. At all. I went through a lotâpersonally, professionally, mentally. And honestly? There were times when I wasnât sure if Iâd ever be back up here again.â
Your chest ached a little at that.
Because you knew.
You knew how much it had taken for him to get here.
Joeâs lips twitched into a small smile. âBut I had a lot of people in my corner. My teammates, my coaches, my family. Andââ He paused, just for a second, and then his eyes found yours.
âAnd someone who reminded me what I was fighting for.â
Your breath hitched.
It wasnât a grand declaration.
It wasnât over the top.
It was just a momentâa split second where it was just you and him in a room full of people.
Joe cleared his throat, shifting his weight, nodding once. âThis is for all the people who never stopped believing in me. And to anyone going through something they donât think theyâll come back fromâkeep going. You never know whatâs waiting for you on the other side.â
The crowd erupted into applause.
Joe gave a small nod, turned, and walked off the stage.
And when he got back to your table, the first thing he did was lean down and press a soft kiss to your temple, murmuring, âTold you Iâd make it worth your time.â
And yeah.
He really, really had.
--
The night felt easy.
The way it always had, before everything got complicated. Before the pressure, before the expectations, before you had to fight for something that should have been effortless.
Now, it was effortless.
Joe was next to you, sleeves pushed up, stirring a pot of pasta while he rambled about the upcoming Super Bowl, going on about the defensive schemes and how the media was making too big of a deal about certain matchups.
Larry sat perched on the counter, her tail flicking every now and then, eyes trained on Joe like she actually cared about football, which was something Joe found endlessly amusing. He had already started referring to her as his cat, despite the fact that she had only tolerated him in the beginning.
âShe loves me more than you now,â he had said just last week, smirking as Larry curled up next to him on the couch.
And you had just rolled your eyes. "Not a chance."
Now, standing here, making dinner in your quiet apartment, it felt like you had never left each otherâs orbit. Like no time had passed at all.
And for the first time in a long time, you werenât thinking about the past.
You were just here. With him.
You turned toward the fridge, reaching to grab the parmesan, when you felt it.
A tap on your shoulder. Instinctively, you turned back. And everything stopped.
Joe was on one knee.
Your breath caught, your heart leaping into your throat as you stared down at him, frozen.
His hands were slightly unsteady, his fingers wrapped around a small, velvet box. His face was flushed, his breathing uneven, his lips parted like even he couldnât believe he was doing this right now.
But his eyesâhis eyesâwere sure. There was no doubt. No hesitation.
Only love.
Joe exhaled sharply, running his free hand over his face before letting out a small, breathless laugh.
âOkay,â he started, shaking his head slightly. âI had this whole plan. I was gonna wait until after the summer, do some big, romantic thing, maybe take you on a trip, make it perfect.â He swallowed hard, looking up at you. âBut, uhâyeah. Clearly, that didnât happen.â
Your hands flew to your mouth, your heart pounding so loudly you could barely hear anything else.
Joeâs fingers tightened around the ring box. âBecause the truth is, I canât wait. I donât want to wait. Iâve been thinking about this since the second you took me back, and Iââ He exhaled sharply, shaking his head. âI bought this ring the week we got back together. I didnât even fucking hesitate. Just walked into the store, told them exactly what I wanted, and bought it right there. Because I knew.â
Your chest ached.
Joe let out a small, nervous laugh, his tongue swiping over his bottom lip. âI knew the second I lost you that I had made the biggest fucking mistake of my life. I knew that I couldnât do life without you, that I didnât want to do life without you. And I knowâI knowâI have spent the last year proving that to you. But let me prove it for the rest of my life.â
Your vision blurred, tears spilling over as you let out a soft, choked breath.
Joeâs voice wavered slightly, his own eyes looking glassy. âI donât want to marry you because itâs what we always planned. I donât want to marry you because itâs what we should do. I want to marry you because I choose you. Every single fucking day. Over and over again. For the rest of my life.â
Your hands were trembling now, your lips parting as you tried to breathe.
Joe swallowed hard, shaking his head. âYou are the love of my life. You always have been. And I am done wasting time.â His jaw clenched slightly, his fingers tightening around the box. âSo, please, for the love of God, put me out of my misery and say yes.â
A breathless laugh bubbled out of you, your whole body trembling, your face wet with tears.
âYes,â you whispered.
Joeâs face broke into the biggest, purest smile you had ever seen.
And then you were falling to your knees in front of him, your hands grabbing his face, pulling him in for a kiss that was everythingâevery promise, every ounce of love, every second of waiting for this moment.
Joe kissed you back instantly, his hands shaking as they wrapped around your waist, pulling you as close as possible, like he could never get enough.
When you finally pulled away, he pressed his forehead to yours, his breath uneven, his thumbs swiping at the tears on your cheeks.
âI love you,â he whispered.
And for the first time in forever, you said it back without hesitation.
âI love you too.â
Joe grinned, slipping the ring onto your finger before he could drop it, and then exhaled dramatically.
âThank God,â he muttered. âThat wouldâve been awkward as hell.â
You laughed, shoving his shoulder. âShut up.â
But as Joe pulled you into his arms, pressing a soft kiss to your temple, Larry watching in the background like she knew exactly what had just happenedâ
You realized something.
This was exactly how it was meant to be.
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