šThe World Ended, and I Survived
Last night, my subconscious handed me the kind of dream you wake from in tearsāthe kind that isnāt just a dream, but a reckoning. Iām still holding pieces of it in my chest, so Iām writing it down before it slips through the cracks. I think it wants to be remembered.
It began with the end of the world.
Something had struck the Earthāan impact so massive it fractured the surface and awakened creatures from beneath. These werenāt metaphors pretending to be monstersāthey were towering humanoid beings who plucked humans from the earth like weeds and devoured them. It felt like the future, but everyone I knew was their current age. Myself included.
Oddly, there wasnāt much on the Earthās surface anymoreājust vast tunnel systems carved into the ground like ant colonies. These subterranean mazes became the last refuge of humanity. But the giants? They had no trouble pulling apart the walls of our safe havens to reach in and feast.
Dustin (my boyfriend) was there. He told me I wasnāt taking it seriously enough, that we needed to move deeper underground. Before descending, we dropped our car keys into mounted tackle-box-like containers near empty parking lotsācommunal stashes for anyone who survived. A last act of sacrifice for strangers weād never meet.
We went down.
The tunnels were strange and alive. Elevators opened at intervals to reveal chaotic scenesāpeople drunk, stripped of inhibition, clinging to pleasure in the face of doom. Dustin grabbed some alcohol and offered me a can. I declined.
āI donāt drink anymore,ā I said. āI donāt want to numb myself.ā
We kept going. Ross, one of Dustin’s friends, met us there, dragging a wagon full of booze. Then my girls arrivedālight in the middle of darkness. They ran to me joyfully and wrapped me in hugs. I asked how they were. They said they were just fine and werenāt scared. They were going with their dad somewhere. They had each other.
They offered me their birthday money āin case I survived.ā And just like that, my heart caved in. They didnāt know money wouldnāt mean much anymore, but they knew they loved me and that they wanted me to be taken care of if I lived. They seemed to fully understand that it was unlikely that any of us would live, and yet, they were mature, balanced, and light hearted. In that moment I was aware that I had never felt so simultaneously proud and devastated. I kissed their heads and watched them run off, small beams of light glowing in the dark. I held on to the moment, gazing down the corridor they ran down long after they disappeared around the corner.
Thenātime skipped, or perhaps I just forgot what happened in between.
The event had already happened. Earth had been hit again. We had survived.
I tore off desperately navigating through rubble and ruin to the place where the girls said theyād be. The tunnels were collapsed. Everything was eerily quiet. Nothing was left but dust and ruin. I was panicked, but still held a thread of hope.
I stood in the place they should have been, but it seemed impossible that anyone could survive the scene I took in. I didn’t even know where to begin, but I was fully prepared to dig through the rubble with my bare hands until I found them. I got on my knees and began digging. I had barely begun when I heard a voice. A narrator. Calm, cruel, and kind all at once:
āAliza was badly wounded from the first impact, but had not told her mother or complained. Both girls were very brave and supported one another. They were afraid but filled with love and died in one anotherās arms.ā
I was shattered shattered. I crumpled into the fetal position and sobbed.
Thatās where he found meāDustin and Duane, both are my boyfriends’, as one. They were the same person now, morphing in and out of each other. Two sides of the same steady hand. He/they scooped me up like a child and carried me to the surface.
Together, we walked to the key boxes. I didnāt know where we were goingāI only knew we had to go.
Dustin/Duane dug through the boxes full of keys while I sat on the curb near the box and whimpered. Something prompted me to look up. I could barely see through my tears and swollen eyes. The box of keys seemed to be glowing in a spotlight, and a flash of yellow between the pole and the box caught my eye. I stood on weak legs and pulled it out.
It was the birthday card my mom sent Aliza. As I opened it, money gracefully floated around my legs and settled at my feet. Hastily scribbled around my mom’s message, the girls had written me a note. I had never seen something as beautiful as their wobbly little misshapen letters and their little names. Their message read:
We love you mom. Yore the best mom in the hole world. We want you to have this and have fun if you live. We hope you live. We hope we get to see you agen.
Love Zarah and Aliza
I sunk to my knees, my children’s money still scattered around me, and sobbed so hard my spirit broke open. I adored every misspelled word. The card I held in my hand was the greatest expression of love I had every received. I no longer had any possessions, but even if I did, this card would remain my most cherished.
Questions raced through my mind. How did they do it? How did they know where Dustin/Duane and I had parked the car and stashed our keys? Did they do it after they had offered me the money and I refused? Did they return to the surface after that? If so, did they get caught to close to the surface? Was that the reason they died? Clearly, they left it here with complete faith that if I lived I would find it. Again, I was gripped with deep pride and suffocating grief.
Once again I was absolutely inconsolable, so Dustin/Duane scooped me up and put me in the passenger seat of whatever vehicle they had managed to secure. They began driving. As we drove my perspective suddenly changed. I saw myself then, from Dustin/Duaneās eyes. I could feel their helplessness, their heartbreak, their quiet desperation to comfort me.
And then I woke up.
š Dream Afterword: Surviving the Unspeakable
This didnāt feel like a dream. It felt like being stripped down to my core. This dream excavated the deepest caverns of my soul. I experienced a level of rawness I can’t face in the daylight, so my subconscious dressed it up in monsters, tunnels, and birthday cards.
This dream was about grief, surrender, and unshakable, enduring love. I got up close and personal with what it means to live through devastation and still keep going. About how tightly I hold my children. About how I fear losing them even though I know I canāt control everything. About how much love I still carry from all the versions of myself who were āhitā and had to rebuild from rubble.
The car keys? Letting go of control. Sacrifice.
The tunnels? The inner labyrinth of fear, love, and responsibility.
The giants? My own monsters, awake and hungry.
And my girls? My heart. My light. The innocence and trust I am sometimes too scared to lean into.
That cardābright yellow against the wreckageāwas the moment grace reached through the ruins. They were gone, and somehow still with me. They were saying:
“Itās okay to live.
Itās okay to feel joy again.
Honor us by truly living.
We never really left you.ā
My children gifted me their innocence, trust, and belief in me and the universe. It was the greatest gift I have ever received. They may have even sacrificed themselves to deliver it. Despite my fierce love, I could not protect them from lifeās larger forces. They clearly had no expectation that I or anyone else could save them, and they demonstrated a level of surrender, trust, and love that cracked me wide open.
š Epilogue: Aliza, Alive and Glowing
As I finished writing this entryāstill wrapped in the ache of that dream, still wiping tearsāAliza walked into the living room.
She stretched, sleepy-eyed, like nothing in the world had shifted, and said,
āCan I watch Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken?ā
And I just sat there.
Heart split. Spirit stunned.
Because of all the movies in the world, she chose one about a girl who discovers sheās part of something deep, ancient, and misunderstood. A girl who has power inside her she doesnāt yet understand. A girl from the sea, learning how to swim in her truth.
It didnāt feel like coincidence.
It felt like confirmation.
That she is here.
That she is okay.
That I can let go of the fear just a little.
That love echoes back to usāsometimes in tentacles and plot twists and animated metaphors.
So, yeah.
I let her watch it.
And I cried through the whole thing.