Girl V Woman (2025)
Clara drove home. She changed out of the pencil skirt into worn flannel pajamas. She made boxed macaroni and cheese—the neon orange kind the girl loved—and ate it sitting on the floor of her living room, the woman’s beige sofa behind her. Then she opened her laptop and, for the first time in months, wrote a poem. It was clumsy. It was honest. It was neither grown-up nor childish.
She understood it then. The girl wasn’t a ghost to be exorcised. The woman wasn’t a fortress to be defended. They were roommates in the same skin, and they’d been fighting over the thermostat for a decade.
Higher. The wind caught her hair, pulling strands from her careful bun. Her skirt hiked up. She didn’t care. At the apex of each arc, her stomach dropped—that same thrilling terror she’d felt at eight, at eighteen, at twenty-five. For five dizzying seconds, she was neither girl nor woman. She was just Clara. Airborne. Laughing so hard she cried, or crying so hard she laughed. girl v woman
She drove not to her minimalist apartment (the woman’s domain, all beige and “tasteful”) but to the old playground at Memorial Park. The swings were still there, rusted chains groaning in the damp. She sat on one, her work heels digging into the wood chips. For a long moment, she just swung, barely moving. The girl in her wanted to pump her legs, to fly so high the chains went slack. The woman whispered about dignity, about a thirty-year-old in a pencil skirt pumping on swings like a child.
It came to a head on a Tuesday. The woman had just signed divorce papers—two years of a marriage that felt like wearing a coat two sizes too small. She sat in her car in the lawyer’s parking lot, the engine off, rain needling the windshield. Her phone buzzed. A friend texted: You’re so strong. A real woman. Clara drove home
But at twenty-five, the girl inside her began to whisper. The woman had a 401(k) and a boyfriend who remembered her birthday but not the name of her favorite book. The girl wanted to lie in the grass and watch clouds shape-shift into dragons. The woman scheduled a promotion meeting. The girl wanted to call her mother just to hear her say, “Baby, you’ll figure it out.” The woman was supposed to have already figured it out.
She finally dragged her heels to stop, breath heaving. The rain had softened to a mist. And in that stillness, something settled. Not a surrender. Not a winner declared. Then she opened her laptop and, for the
Not a girl. Not a woman.