One afternoon, Elif visited an old potter named Selim. In his workshop, she saw a beautiful ceramic vase, but it was crisscrossed with gold-filled cracks.
The ache didn't vanish instantly, but it changed. It was no longer a jagged, painful secret. It became a thin, golden line—a reminder that she had survived, that she had loved, and that she was still standing. Icimde Bir Yara Vardir
Selim smiled, his hands still covered in clay. "In the art of Kintsugi , we don't hide the break. We highlight it with gold. We believe a piece is more beautiful for having been broken and repaired." One afternoon, Elif visited an old potter named Selim
Elif lived in a house full of light, but she always walked as if she were carrying a heavy, invisible glass bowl. For years, she told no one about the "wound" inside her. It wasn’t a physical thing; it was a silent ache that had settled in her chest the day she had to say a final goodbye to her childhood home and the dreams she’d left there. It was no longer a jagged, painful secret
That evening, Elif didn't try to drown out the silence. She sat with her "wound." She acknowledged the sadness of her past and the weight she had been carrying. She realized that this wound had actually made her more compassionate toward others; it had given her a depth that her "perfect" self never had.
She wasn't "broken." She was a masterpiece in progress, gold-filled cracks and all.
She treated this wound like a secret shame. She tried to "fix" it with busy schedules, loud music, and constant smiles. But at night, in the stillness, the ache would throb, whispering, “I am still here.”