Some people are like the first chair: familiar, worn in, and quietly dependable. They’ve witnessed your changes, your storms, your small victories. They may not always have the right words, but their steady presence wraps around you like a blanket you’ve owned for years—frayed at the edges, yet impossible to throw away. Their comfort isn’t loud, but it is real, and it reminds you that history has its own kind of love.
Then there is the second chair, where someone sits not out of habit, but by choice. They arrive and stay with intention, showing up in the ordinary days and not just the dramatic ones. Their commitment is active, not assumed, and it teaches you that love can be both effort and ease. And finally, the third chair waits for you. It is the space where you learn that your own presence is not a consolation prize, but a foundation. Here, you are not abandoned; you are anchored—to yourself, to your worth, and to the quiet strength that carries you forward when others can’t stay.
