She wasn't "broken." She was a masterpiece in progress, gold-filled cracks and all.
Does this story resonate with the you were looking for, or should we focus on a different interpretation of the wound?
Elif lived in a house full of light, but she always walked as if she were carrying a heavy, invisible glass bowl. For years, she told no one about the "wound" inside her. It wasn’t a physical thing; it was a silent ache that had settled in her chest the day she had to say a final goodbye to her childhood home and the dreams she’d left there.
The ache didn't vanish instantly, but it changed. It was no longer a jagged, painful secret. It became a thin, golden line—a reminder that she had survived, that she had loved, and that she was still standing.
She treated this wound like a secret shame. She tried to "fix" it with busy schedules, loud music, and constant smiles. But at night, in the stillness, the ache would throb, whispering, “I am still here.”