Broken Hearts
I had just closed my eyes when I heard my phone vibrate. It was a message from Helena.
"I just wanna explode into a million pieces"
I felt my heart sink. Helena was my best friend. She had been battling depression for years. Started when she was a kid. I didn't know the whole story, I just knew she heard those words for the first time by the mouth of a therapist when she was only fourteen.
"What happened?"
"Since when something need to happen?"
I met Helena at our senior year at high school. When the seating chart was set up by the teacher, I was assigned to the desk behind hers. At first sight, I thought we didn't had much in common. She liked rock music, I've always been more into pop (which she found lame). We both liked movies, but she was lot more cult, while I was a fan of silly romantic comedies. She valued sense, me: sensibility. She was an open book and I'd learn to hid my true self - if ever there was one - since an early age. Somehow, though, we bonded.
"Usually there's a treager"
"Yeah... but, I don't know. I just feel lost”
Over time, we became close. In some way, she was able to crack the walls I'd built around myself. There was no romantic inclination whatsoever, but I felt like she could understand me better than myself. I had always been afraid of other people's judgments about me, so I got used to wear masks. I felt miserable. But in front of her, I felt naked. When I was expecting my damaged self to scare her away, she stayed. She accepted me.
"But you had a plan remember? Stick to that plan."
"But what's the point?"
Turns out that even though we were different, we were also very similar. There were little coincidences. Our moms had known each other for years, they worked together, and even then we had never met; we lived closed by; we were both introverted people. But the most important thing is that we saw the world in the same colors. We felt the world the same way. We both felt broken. So we became each other's rock. She was there for me. I tried to be there for her. I felt more connected to her than to anyone on my own family. I loved her. We didn't share blood, but she became my family.
"The point is... living? Making at least what depends on you to be OK. It's everything going to be OK, Helena."
It hurt so much not being able to make her feel better. Being more rational, she would always come up with some practical solution to my problems when I was felling down. I wasn't able to do that. What I could do, was offering emotional support and even that I couldn't do. I felt worthless, powerless. What was the right thing to say? She was drowning and I felt I wasn't strong enough to pull her out. I barely had strength to keep my own head above the water. I just wanted to take the pain from her. I was terrified of losing her.
"I'm tired of waiting things to be OK."
I got up and tuned the lights on. I put on a coat, grabbed my phone and left home. There was no moon in the sky. I ran as fast as I could to her house and rang the bell. She didn't answer, so I kept pressing the button. The neighbors could wake up, but who cares? Suddenly, a faint light appeared inside the house. She opened the door. Her eyes were red and she was sniffing.
"Why are you here?"
"You're my family. You're my person."
Crying, I held her tightly in my arms. I hoped she could feel how deeply I loved her. I hope it was enough to warm her heart, just a little bit. I wished I was able to give her as much strength as she gave me. I wasn't ready to give up. I wasn't ready to let her give up. Life had constantly been knocking her down, but she was the strongest person I knew. She was still here. I had to believe that the sun would come out soon. I had to believe we were meant for more than this. In my heart, I knew she was special. I knew she had more to give. I couldn't do much, but I could be here, holding her until the world stopped spinning.
"You never let go of your person."













