They see me with hands on the wheel, feet steady on the gas, a woman who conquers, who builds, who signs papers with a name they say will mean something. They speak of my future like prophecy, a business to run, a world to own. They dress me in ambition, in power, in a suit that doesnβt fit my skin. The woman I was meant to be. She stirs sugar into coffee, presses her lips to a childβs warm forehead, sits by a window and watches rain make poetry of the streets Yet their voices are so loud, so certain, that I cannot even whisper what I want. So I nod, I smile, I let them build this version of me, one brick at a time, until I am buried beneath it. And maybe one day, I will forget the woman I could have been, the mother, the homemaker, the quiet kind of happy and only remember the one they never let me become.