THE JOURNAL THAT FOUND HER.

THE JOURNAL THAT FOUND HER.

Aria didnโ€™t care for New Yearโ€™s Eve anymore. Not after the year she just had. Her friends were posting their ‘big wins’ online: new jobs, new relationships, glowing highlight reels polished with filters and enthusiasm.

Meanwhile, Aria sat cross-legged on her bed, staring at a notebook filled with goals she never met.

She tried to write her resolutions for the new year, but the page stayed empty.
The kind of empty that echoed.

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At 11:40 p.m., she decided to get some air, hoping a walk would shake off the heaviness sitting on her chest. The streets were quiet, everyone indoors waiting for midnight celebrations.

Thatโ€™s when she saw it: a tiny antique shop wedged between two tall buildings she could have sworn had never been there before.

The sign above the door read: โ€œTimekeepers & Trinkets.โ€ Weird name.

But she was tired, cold, and curious enough to push the door open.

A soft golden bell chimed as she stepped inside. The place smelled like old books and cedar wood. Strange clocks lined the shelves, clocks that ticked backward, clocks shaped like compasses, clocks that didnโ€™t tick at all.

โ€œYouโ€™re late,โ€ he said cheerfully.
โ€œI, what?โ€ Aria blinked. โ€œI didnโ€™t even know this place existed.โ€

โ€œMost people donโ€™t, until they need to.โ€ He slid a small box toward her. โ€œThis is for you.โ€

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An old man appeared from behind the counter, his glasses hanging halfway down his nose.

โ€œYouโ€™re late,โ€ he said cheerfully.
โ€œI, what?โ€ Aria blinked. โ€œI didnโ€™t even know this place existed.โ€

โ€œMost people donโ€™t, until they need to.โ€ He slid a small box toward her. โ€œThis is for you.โ€

โ€œI think youโ€™re mixing me up with someone else.โ€ โ€œNo,โ€ he said gently. โ€œIโ€™m not.โ€
Aria hesitated, then opened the box.

Inside was a leather-bound journal, dark brown with gold-etched edges.
On the cover was just one word: ‘Remember,’.
โ€œItโ€™s blank,โ€ she said.

โ€œFor now,โ€ the man replied. โ€œIt shows what youโ€™ve forgotten to see.โ€
Aria wanted to ask what he meant, but the lights flickered. When she looked up again, the man was gone, as if he had never been there.

The bell chimed behind her. Midnight.
She took the journal home, confusion tucked under her arm.

That night, Aria sat on the floor of her room, journal in her hands.
She flipped it open, and gasped.
The pages were no longer blank.

Ink rippled across the paper like water forming shapes. The journal was painting memories, her memories. Not the dramatic ones. Not the painful ones. Justโ€ฆ moments.

A page filled with the image of her crying after failing a supposed โ€œdream job.โ€ But the journal didnโ€™t show the tears. It showed her kneeling on the kitchen floor, exhausted but still breathing, still trying.

It showed the moment she sent three more applications the next morning, even with puffy eyes.

Another page showed her writing late into the night, even when the words felt heavy and stuck.

Another showed her comforting a friend who never knew how much Aria was hurting too.

These werenโ€™t failures.
These were acts of courage she never gave herself credit for. Aria swallowed hard.

All year, sheโ€™d seen herself as someone who couldnโ€™t keep up. Someone who kept getting left behind.

But the journal showed something else: A girl who stayed soft even when the world felt harsh. A girl who continued even when it was quiet and no one was clapping.

For the first time in months, Aria felt something warm in her chest, something like hope, small but real. Maybe she wasnโ€™t broken. Maybe she was just beginning. She closed the journal gently.

Tomorrow, she decided, she would write the new chapter herself.

What are your thoughts on Ariaโ€™s journey? Can you see yourself in her story?

Which part of the year did you push so hardโ€ฆbut never gave yourself the credit you deserved?

Is there a moment from 2025 that, when you look back, could help shape your 2026 perspective?

Letโ€™s sit with that for a moment.

I want to hear from you:
At what point in Ariaโ€™s story did you see yourself most clearly?

What lesson from her journey feels personal to you, the one you know you need to work on?

And, if weโ€™re honest, what mistake of Ariaโ€™s are you still repeating and ready to confront?

Or does someone comes to mind as you read this? Donโ€™t forget to share the link to this post with them as a reminder.

Share your thoughts in the comments.
Letโ€™s reflect together.
Letโ€™s learn together.
And letโ€™s step into the new year stronger than before.

See you again next week.
#Eyistar_TheGlobalWriter ๐Ÿ’œโœจ โœ๏ธ๐Ÿป

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4 responses to “THE JOURNAL THAT FOUND HER.”

  1. Ojo Deborah Omotola Avatar
    Ojo Deborah Omotola

    Wow, this awesome!๐Ÿคฉ
    This post opened my eyes to the fact that sometimes we fail to see and recognize how far we have come and take it for granted.
    I can somewhat relate to this.
    Sometimes, I usually think I have nothing to offer but when I began to look within, I saw that there is actually some things I can do but I do overlook them.
    Thank you very much for this wonderful piece ma๐Ÿ™

  2. Oluwapelumi ogunniran Avatar

    So insightful ๐Ÿ‘
    In this piece I learnt to celebrate my little wins, step out of failures and embrace possibilities.

  3. Timilehin Avatar
    Timilehin

    I was like Aria at some point in 2025 especially when I go through LinkedIn, I see people posting their different achievements and accomplishments but it was as if I had nothing to show for but towards the end of the year I carried my book and honestly I was happy about how far I had come, It was not all I achieved but I focused on the one I achieved. I believe and I know there is a lot for me to achieve this new year 2026 and I am going to embrace it.

  4. Josephine Avatar
    Josephine

    This is amazing ๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿ™Œ

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