It all started with a simple text about tuna salad: โHow long is this good in the fridge?โ But when my sister Peregrine asked, โAre you okay?โโI realized I wasnโt. Six months earlier, Iโd lost my job and moved into her apartment, promising it was temporary. She never pressured me. Just quietly supported me while I drifted. One night, she caught me picking at expired tuna and gently said, โYou donโt have to punish yourself with that.โ Later that night, I finally admitted, โI donโt know how to start over.โ She took my hand and said, โThen we start small.โ
We made a list: update resume, shower daily, apply for jobs. Slowly, I gained momentum. I landed an interview, and with her help, I got the job. We celebrated with sushiโno more tuna salad. Then I discovered sheโd been covering everythingโbills, rent, foodโquietly drowning in debt. We made a new list. Budgeted. Took side gigs. Paid off every cent.
When we finally celebrated being debt-free, a neighbor showed up needing help. Peregrine took him in without hesitation. Watching her give, even when she had little, inspired me. Eventually, she lost her job too. I repeated her words: โLetโs start small.โ We built her list. She cried, struggledโbut landed a better job in the end. Our apartment became more than a lifelineโit became a home. One day, she made tuna salad again and joked, โIโll finish it before day three.โ I smiled, knowing weโd come full circle.
It wasnโt just about the food. It was about learning to speak up, to rebuild, and to start smallโtogether.So how long does tuna salad last?
Three days. Maybe five.
But donโt wait that long to check inโespecially on yourself.

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