Tiel :
They didn’t choose death to escape their love, but because this world refused to give their love a place to exist. They loved each other so deeply—so deeply that neither of them could bear to leave the other behind. He could not imagine living in a world without him, and he could not let him face the end alone. Their lives were filled with hardship; even loving each other meant being watched, judged, and seen as “wrong,” when all they had ever done was love each other sincerely and purely. They never hated their love, but they began to believe that perhaps the problem was not their love at all, but the world that refused to accept it. And so, a quiet, fragile hope was born—both sorrowful and gentle—that if they could be reborn, if they could live in different bodies, or in a place without religion, without condemning eyes, then maybe their love would no longer be called a “sin.” But in the end, what mattered most to them was not another life, nor a better world, but simply that in their final moments, they were still together—no need to hide, no fear, no judgment. Just having each other, and for them… that alone was more than enough.
2026-03-23 04:07:48