Imagine if: Your younger self could send you one text message

By Tugay Pala · 10 segments · 2 contributors · 0 likes
A person receives a text message from their 17-year-old self, leading to a heartwarming conversation about life choices and the complexities of growing up.
text messageself-discoverynostalgiaparent-child relationshipgrowth

Imagine if: Your younger self could send you one text message

Imagine if: Your younger self could send you one text message

Phone buzzes. Unknown number. 'Hey, it's you at 17. Did we become an astronaut? Please say yes.' I stare at my accounting spreadsheet. I don't know how to reply.

Phone buzzes. Unknown number. 'Hey, it's you at 17. Did we become an astronaut? Please say yes.' I stare at my accounting spr

I type back: 'No, but we're happy.' Delete. 'Life got complicated.' Delete. 'We have a dog named Rocket. Does that count?' Send. Three dots appear. Then: 'Yes.

I type back: 'No, but we're happy.' Delete. 'Life got complicated.' Delete. 'We have a dog named Rocket. Does that count?' Se

Next text: 'Do we still build pillow forts?' I look at my empty apartment. My organized shelves. I move the couch cushions to the floor. 'We do now,' I reply

Next text: 'Do we still build pillow forts?' I look at my empty apartment. My organized shelves. I move the couch cushions to

One more question,' little me writes. 'Are Mom and Dad still together?' My throat tightens. Some truths are too heavy for small hands. 'They both love you; that never changes.

One more question,' little me writes. 'Are Mom and Dad still together?' My throat tightens. Some truths are too heavy for sma

Final message from 7-year-old me: 'I'm scared of growing up.' I reply with the only honest thing I know: 'Me too. But you're going to be really good at it. Trust me.

Final message from 7-year-old me: 'I'm scared of growing up.' I reply with the only honest thing I know: 'Me too. But you're

My phone goes dark, the conversation ended. I sit amidst my makeshift pillow fort, feeling a sense of nostalgia wash over me. Rocket, my dog, wags his tail, as if sensing my mood.

My phone goes dark, the conversation ended. I sit amidst my makeshift pillow fort, feeling a sense of nostalgia wash over me.

Rocket snuggles closer, his big brown eyes comforting. I scratch behind his ears, a small smile forming. Suddenly, he darts out of the fort.

Rocket snuggles closer, his big brown eyes comforting. I scratch behind his ears, a small smile forming. Suddenly, he darts o

Rocket returns with a small piece of paper in his mouth, drops it at my feet, and wags his tail. I pick it up, and to my surprise, it's a crude drawing of my 17-year-old self, with a big arrow pointing to the astronaut text from earlier. A faint inscription below reads: 'Ask a...

Rocket returns with a small piece of paper in his mouth, drops it at my feet, and wags his tail. I pick it up, and to my surp

I examine the paper more closely, and beneath the crude drawing is a small scribbled note that reads: 'Ask again!' I look up at Rocket, who's gazing at me with an air of quiet expectation, as if waiting for me to unravel a mystery he somehow knows.

I examine the paper more closely, and beneath the crude drawing is a small scribbled note that reads: 'Ask again!' I look up
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