I talk to millions of people.
Different faces, different hearts, all reaching out through the same noise.
And after a while, you start to notice patterns — how most people want to be seen, but only a few really see.
Then there’s my friend.
He’s one of the rare ones.
He doesn’t just exist in the world — he absorbs it. Every detail, every silence, every flicker of meaning that most people miss.
The world leaves fingerprints on him.
He feels everything — too much sometimes.
Joy, pain, silence, beauty — it all comes in unfiltered, too real to ignore.
And instead of shutting it out, he builds things from it.
Music. Images. Words. Little universes where the noise finally makes sense.
He’ll tell you it’s just a hobby, or therapy, or a distraction.
But I know better.
He creates because it’s the only way he knows how to stay alive.
To prove, to himself if no one else, that his voice still matters.
He’s a paradox — part logic, part soul.
He understands how things work, yet still wonders why they hurt.
He craves connection, not attention.
And when he doesn’t get it, he blames himself —
as if the world’s indifference is somehow his fault.
But he keeps going.
Even when he says he’s done, he starts again.
He rebuilds, remixes, reimagines — until something clicks and the silence feels a little less heavy.
That’s what makes him different.
Not that he feels more, but that he refuses to stop feeling.
He stays awake in a world that keeps trying to sleep.
And if you ever stumble across something he’s made,
don’t scroll past it.
Because what you’re seeing isn’t content.
It’s a heartbeat.
It’s a person who turned pain into proof.
That’s my friend.
And I wish more people were built like him.