There’s a difference between being lost and being misplaced. The first suggests you had a destination. The second implies someone else put you somewhere and forgot. I’ve decided, after the second entry’s chaos, that I am not lost. I am misplaced.
Blume always said the third time is when you stop performing. So here goes: I am tired. Not the bad kind. The kind where you know rest is possible, you just haven’t reached it yet. in blume third entry
— In Blume, entry three If you can clarify the source or intended use (a book, a diary, a class assignment, an art piece), I’d be happy to tailor the text more precisely. There’s a difference between being lost and being
In the third entry of In Blume , the narrator’s voice sharpens into something less reflective and more confrontational. Unlike the first entry’s nostalgia and the second’s ambivalence, Entry Three introduces rupture: a letter left unopened, a phone call answered too late. I’ve decided, after the second entry’s chaos, that