VK (let’s call him that—his username was just the initial, lost in a sea of reposted aesthetics) stared at the ceiling. The city hummed outside his seventh-floor walk-up. He wasn’t tired. He was empty . He scrolled through photos of crowded parties he’d skipped, playlists titled “for the drive home alone,” and black-and-white shots of rain on windows. He felt like a spectator in his own bloodstream. By 3:00 AM, he had rewritten the same message to an ex-girlfriend fourteen times. He deleted the draft each time. The silence wasn't peaceful. It was a verdict.
His feed had turned sinister. Every scroll was a mirror: articles on burnout, memes about crying in the office bathroom, lo-fi hip-hop beats to dissociate to. He started a new draft. “I think my body forgot how to shut down.” His fingers hovered. He didn’t post it. Instead, he watched a three-hour documentary about black holes. The narrator said, “Time stops at the event horizon.” VK felt a strange kinship with the void. He took a screenshot of the quote. Maybe he’d post it tomorrow. Maybe not. 7 sleepless nights vk
He smiled. Then he closed his eyes. And for the first time in a week, he didn’t care whether sleep came or not. VK (let’s call him that—his username was just
No catharsis. No magic cure. The sun rose the same way it always did—orange and indifferent. But VK did something different. He turned off his phone. He placed it face-down on the nightstand. He lay in the growing light and listened to his own breath—ragged, human, alive. He didn’t sleep. But he rested. The insomnia was still there, a wolf at the door. But for now, he stopped trying to shoo it away. He just let it sit beside him. He was empty
“Seven nights to learn that the dark is not a void. It’s a canvas.”
He picked up his phone one last time before dawn. He opened VK. He typed a single sentence into his private notes, not for anyone else: