He ran down the stairs, nearly slipping, his bag hitting his side with every step. The sound of the train arriving echoed through the station, that familiar metallic screech that always meant one thing:
He wasnāt going to make it.
Still, he ran.
Because sometimes⦠you run even when you know.
He reached the platform just in time to see the doors close.
The train moved.
Slowly at first⦠then faster.
And just like thatā¦
It was gone.
He stood there, breathing heavily, staring at nothing.
āPerfect,ā he muttered.
That train wasnāt just a train.
It was timing.
It was routine.
It was the one thing in his day that still worked.
And now even thatā¦
Didnāt.
He walked over to a bench and sat down.
Frustrated.
Tired.
Life hadnāt been easy lately.
Work felt empty.
Days felt repetitive.
And everything he used to look forward toā¦
Didnāt feel the same anymore.
He looked at his phone.
Another 30 minutes for the next train.
He sighed.
Thatās when he noticed her.
She was sitting a few seats away.
Not doing anything.
Not on her phone.
Not talking to anyone.
Just⦠sitting.
But something about her stood out.
Maybe it was the way she looked around.
Calm.
Present.
Like she wasnāt in a rush to be anywhere.
He looked away.
Then back again.
She noticed.
Smiled slightly.
He didnāt expect himself to respond.
But he did.
A small smile.
āMissed it?ā she asked.
He laughed quietly.
āYeah⦠clearly.ā
āMe too,ā she said.
That surprised him.
āYou donāt seem upset about it,ā he said.
She shrugged.
āSometimes missing something⦠gives you something else.ā
He didnāt understand what she meant.
But he didnāt argue.
They sat in silence for a moment.
Then she spoke again.
āYou always in a hurry?ā
He thought about it.
āYeah⦠I guess I am.ā
āWhy?ā she asked.
He opened his mouth to answerā¦
Then stopped.
Because he didnāt really know.
That question stayed in the air between them.
Why?
Why was he always rushing?
To get where?
To do what?
āI donāt know,ā he said finally.
She nodded.
Like she expected that answer.
āI used to be like that,ā she said.
āUsed to?ā
āYeah,ā she smiled.
āThen one day⦠I realized I was running through my life instead of living it.ā
He looked at her.
Something about what she said felt⦠real.
āWhat changed?ā he asked.
She looked out toward the tracks.
āI stopped chasing things that didnāt make me happy.ā
Simple words.
But heavy.
He leaned back.
Thinking.
Work.
Stress.
Routine.
Everything that filled his days.
Did any of it actually make him happy?
He didnāt have an answer.
The announcement for the next train echoed through the station.
People started moving again.
Standing.
Preparing.
He stayed sitting.
āSo⦠what do you do now?ā he asked.
She smiled.
āI live slower.ā
He laughed.
āThatās not really a job.ā
āI didnāt say it was,ā she replied.
There was something about her calmness that made him feel⦠different.
Less tense.
Less rushed.
The train arrived.
Doors opened.
People rushed in.
He stood up.
Looked at her.
āYou coming?ā he asked.
She shook her head.
āI think Iāll miss this one too.ā
He smiled.
Then hesitated.
For a second⦠he thought about staying.
Just sitting there.
Not rushing.
Not thinking about whatās next.
Just⦠being.
But old habits are strong.
āI should go,ā he said.
She nodded.
āTake your time,ā she replied.
He stepped onto the train.
Found a place near the door.
As it started moving, he looked back.
She was still there.
Sitting.
Calm.
Not rushing anywhere.
And for the first time in a long timeā¦
He felt something different.
Not stress.
Not pressure.
Just⦠a quiet thought.
Maybe missing that trainā¦
Wasnāt a bad thing.
That day didnāt change his life completely.
He still went to work.
Still followed his routine.
But something small stayed with him.
The question.
The feeling.
The pause.
And sometimesā¦
Thatās how change begins.
Not with something big.
But with a momentā¦
You almost missed.
