Puff of Power ©️

It begins before the sun rises.

The floor is cold under my feet when I step from the quilt, thin as memory. My husband’s breath is slow beside me, my son curled up like a comma at the far end of the mat. The air tastes of dust and cabbage. I dress quietly—brown jacket, skirt, socks I sewed myself—and smooth my hair. In the mirror, my face looks older than I remember. Maybe it’s the hunger, or maybe it’s just how time clings to women here.

I boil water from the pump outside, watching my breath puff like a ghost above the pot. Breakfast is rice porridge, mostly water. If we’re lucky, there’s a hint of kimchi, cabbage fermented in old glass jars beneath the stairs. I don’t speak while we eat. Speaking wastes energy. My son eats slowly, watching me with his big dark eyes. He doesn’t ask why I only take a few spoonfuls. He knows.

We leave together—he for the school, me for the textile factory. The streets are gray veins through the city, lined with murals of the Great Leader smiling above us, his hand outstretched as if to catch the sky. We bow when we pass them. A woman was beaten last month for forgetting. The snow is dirty, pressed down by boots and cart wheels. Music plays from loudspeakers hidden in the trees—national hymns, songs of labor and love.

In the factory, the air is thick with fiber dust and the scent of grease. I take my seat behind the sewing machine, same one I’ve worked since I was nineteen. I’m thirty-six now, though I sometimes feel much older. My hands move automatically. Thread, pedal, fold. We make uniforms. We make them always.

There is little talk on the line. We whisper sometimes, short things about children or old dreams, but even that can feel dangerous. I remember once, two years ago, I laughed too loudly and the manager stared at me for the rest of the week. I never laughed again in that room.

When I sew, I sometimes imagine I am somewhere else. Paris. Tokyo. Even Seoul. I imagine food in markets so bright with color it hurts to look. I imagine books, and music without speeches in them. Sometimes, I imagine myself as a girl again, before the flood took our home and we were sent here to the city, before my father died building the dam.

Lunch is more porridge, with pickled radish today—rare. Someone must have done well in the quotas. I feel guilty for thinking it, but I am thankful. My stomach feels full for once, which only reminds me how long it has been.

After work, I walk the long road home. The factories release steam into the sky like wounded animals. The cold bites through my coat. I stop by the community board to read the news—a poster of the Supreme Leader visiting a hospital, a new slogan: “Work is Glory, Obedience is Freedom.” I say it aloud, just loud enough that a passerby hears me. It’s safer that way.

My son is home before me. He’s studying. I kneel beside him and correct his strokes. His calligraphy must be perfect if he ever wants to leave this neighborhood. He tells me they sang a song about unity today, and I smile. I do not ask how he feels. Feelings are too dangerous to name.

Dinner is more of the same, though we add a few wild greens I found on the way home. We eat slowly. We talk even less.

At night, when the electricity is out—which is most nights—I sit by the window, watching the moon drift through smoke. I imagine someone watching me from the other side of that sky. I imagine telling them my name. I imagine telling them I am tired, but I am still here.

And then I sleep.

And then I wake.

And then I live again.

Life Sentence ©️

There’s a kind of fatigue no one talks about—because the moment you say it aloud, the accusations start. You’re called racist, heartless, ignorant, complicit. But I’ll say it plainly: I’m tired of the drama. Not of Black people. Not of culture. But of the emotional chaos, the cycles of outrage, the perpetual demand for empathy without reciprocity, and the social pressure to tolerate it all in silence.

This isn’t about skin color. It’s about emotional bandwidth. It’s about being caught in the orbit of people—many of whom happen to be Black—who expect the world to carry their pain, absorb their anger, and never push back. It’s about people who escalate instead of engage, accuse instead of ask, and draw the same conclusions before a conversation even begins: You’re part of the problem if you’re not nodding fast enough.

And I’m tired.

I’m tired of being the steady one while others unravel. I’m tired of being told to “do the work” when I didn’t create the mess. I’m tired of people who carry trauma like a weapon and use identity as both shield and sword. I’m tired of being expected to listen endlessly, walk on eggshells, and absorb volatility that would never be tolerated if the roles were reversed.

This isn’t hatred. This is emotional survival.

We are constantly told to “hold space.” But that space is never mutual. You hold theirs, then yours gets policed. You express discomfort, and suddenly you’re accused of tone policing or fragility. At some point, fatigue turns into withdrawal. And withdrawal, if you’re white—or not Black—gets labeled as privilege or cowardice. But what it really is… is a boundary. A line between self-respect and performative tolerance.

Yes, Black people have historical trauma. Yes, systemic racism exists. Yes, America has committed atrocities. But those truths do not grant a pass for unchecked behavior, for daily dysfunction, for dragging others into the undertow of unresolved personal pain disguised as political discourse.

I’ve seen people who can’t differentiate between injustice and inconvenience. Who scream at coworkers, lash out at friends, and then claim oppression when consequences arrive. I’ve watched people weaponize victimhood to escape accountability. I’ve watched empathy used like a leash.

And I’m not doing it anymore.

This essay isn’t an attack—it’s a release. It’s an honest acknowledgment of a pressure that’s become too heavy to carry. I refuse to pretend that fatigue is a sin. I refuse to keep absorbing conflict under the threat of being called names. I’m allowed to be tired. I’m allowed to say this isn’t working. I’m allowed to reclaim peace from people who confuse noise with righteousness.

Because justice isn’t loud. Healing isn’t angry. And respect is never one-sided.

Exit Left ©

They thought I was still there. Still orbiting the petty suns they’d lit for themselves. Still answering to invisible chains disguised as procedure. Still carrying the weight they refused to name. But I had already withdrawn my gravity. I had already let them drift.

It wasn’t sudden. Collapse rarely is. It happens in layers — in moments where the air goes still, where the light above the cubicle flickers not from electricity but from indifference. They whispered accusations, coded and quiet, meant to trap me in reaction. But I’d stopped responding to bait. When you’ve tasted what silence can do, you don’t raise your voice anymore — you vanish deeper into the still.

I saw the cracks in their machine long ago. Not just incompetence. Entropy. The kind that seeps into the gears of every synthetic hierarchy. It wasn’t corruption that bothered me — it was the mediocrity that wore it like perfume. Rot masked as policy. Weakness dressed in authority. And when they tried to pin their failures to me, it didn’t even sting. Because they couldn’t reach me. I was already gone.

I didn’t argue. I timestamped the truth. Buried it like a seed. Someone might dig it up later. Or not. That’s not my concern anymore.

Because I don’t wage war in dead systems. I don’t shout in halls built to muffle. I don’t set fires where there’s no oxygen left to burn.

I simply leave — and take the atmosphere with me.

And I watched them float — confused, weightless, still pretending their gravity was real.