The Atlas Of Elsewhere

Drama Fiction

Written in response to: "Your character wants something they can’t (or shouldn’t) have." as part of Food for Thought.

By the time I turned seventy-three, I owned two hundred and forty-seven guidebooks. They occupied an entire wall of my apartment: Morocco, Peru, Mongolia, Iceland, Japan, Namibia, Patagonia. Cities with names that sounded invented. Villages accessible only by river. Mountains that required three days of climbing and lungs younger than mine.

Every shelf was arranged by continent. Every guidebook was pristine. Not one had ever left the apartment. I told myself, every year, that later would come.

Visitors often mistook them for souvenirs.

"They must bring back memories," the nurse said one afternoon while checking my blood pressure.

I glanced at the books.

"No," I said. "They bring back possibilities."

There is a difference. Memories belong to things that happened.

The nurse smiled politely, the way people do when they suspect old age has made you eccentric. Before leaving, she asked whether I needed anything.

"Another decade."

She laughed.

I didn't.

The doctors had become annoyingly specific about time. For years they had spoken in broad, comforting estimates. A few years. Several years. We'll monitor the situation.

Now they spoke in months. Sometimes weeks.

One of them had actually drawn a timeline, as though death were a train and we were discussing arrival platforms.

What haunted me wasn't dying.

It was geography.

People expect dying people to regret relationships, lost loves, old arguments, career choices. Those things barely made my list. My great regret was that I would never stand in the Atacama Desert and look at a sky untouched by city lights. I would never sit beside a fisherman on some Greek island and discover that we shared no common language but understood each other anyway.

Years earlier I had stumbled across a word in an obscure article.

Onism.

I read it and felt diagnosed.

At twenty-two, maps covered my bedroom walls, and I could still recite the capitals of forty countries the way other boys knew football scores. At twenty-five, I postponed a backpacking trip because my father became ill. Three years later my mother followed him. At thirty-one, I married Clara. I still believed, back then, that time was something that replenished itself. At thirty-three, we bought an apartment. Promotions arrived at thirty-six and forty-one. Somewhere in a drawer I still have two plane tickets to Lisbon — a honeymoon we cancelled twice and then simply stopped mentioning. They've gone soft at the corners.

Then Clara became sick.

She was forty-eight when the diagnosis arrived and fifty-three when she died.

At fifty-four, I decided it was finally time to travel.

At fifty-five, I discovered how lonely an airport can feel when the person who was supposed to stand beside you is gone.

So I postponed.

At first for a season. Then for a year. Grief settled into routine, routine hardened into habit, and habit quietly transformed itself into decades.

That evening my granddaughter visited.

Emma was seventeen. She found me sitting in my armchair, staring at the globe that occupied a small table beside the window.

"Planning a trip?" she asked, dropping her backpack on the floor.

"Running out of time."

"Everyone is."

"Not like this."

She studied me for a moment. Emma had inherited Clara's habit of looking directly at people when she thought they were avoiding the real subject.

"You've been thinking about it again."

"Thinking about what?"

"The fact that you'll never see everything."

I laughed.

"Everything?"

"Fine. Most things."

She glanced at the wall of guidebooks.

"You know what your problem is?"

"I suspect you're about to tell me."

"You think life is a collection project. Like Pokémon. My friend Sanne says the same thing about her mum and shoes, but it's basically the same idea."

"You compare my existential suffering to your friend's mother's shoes?"

"Basically."

"It isn't a collection project?"

"No."

"What is it then?"

"I don't know."

"Excellent philosophy."

"I'm serious."

"So am I."

She walked over to the globe and spun it with one finger. When it slowed, she placed her finger somewhere in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

"What's here?"

"Mostly water."

"Have you seen it?"

"No."

"Do you regret not seeing this specific piece of water?"

"That's different."

"Why?"

I opened my mouth. Closed it again. The answer felt obvious until I tried to explain it.

Finally I shrugged.

Emma didn't look triumphant, the way I'd half expected.

"I don't know either," she said. "But it feels different, right?"

I didn't answer. But it did.

After she left, I couldn't sleep. Not because she had solved anything. For decades I had imagined the world as a catalogue of missed opportunities. I kept thinking about that patch of blue with nothing on it, and why it didn't hurt the way Fez or the Serengeti hurt. I didn't have an answer. I just couldn't put the question down.

Near dawn I pulled a guidebook from the shelf. India. Markets overflowing with colour. Crowded streets. Temples. I sat reading until the sun came up, then reached for another. For a few days I kept at it, hopping between continents the way I always had. It felt good for about an hour each time. Then it felt exactly like it always had: information about places I would never see, filed away next to the possibilities.

The next doctor's appointment went badly. Badly enough that even doctors stopped reaching for careful language. Badly enough that timelines disappeared altogether. The doctor mentioned, almost as an afterthought, that long-haul flights were now firmly off the table — the pressure, the altitude, his phrase was "not advisable in your condition." I nodded as though this were reasonable information to receive calmly.

I returned home carrying a folder I never opened.

The guidebooks waited on their shelves. Outside, summer sunlight spilled across the rooftops. A plane crossed the sky. I watched it until it was gone.

Then, before I had properly decided to, I was in the hallway putting on my coat.

I told myself I was only going to look. Buy a ticket at the counter, somewhere, anywhere — Lisbon, if I was honest with myself, though I didn't let myself think the word. I grabbed an old shoulder bag from the top of the closet, one I hadn't touched in years, and while I was shoving a jumper into it my hand found a postcard tucked into the lining. Blank. Addressed, in Clara's handwriting, to nobody, stamped but never sent. I keep telling him I'm too tired to plan it. I'm not tired. I'm scared of dying somewhere he can't get me home from. I read it twice at the door, coat half on, and then I put it in my pocket and left anyway, because if I stopped to think about it I wouldn't go at all.

The taxi ride to Schiphol took forty minutes. I don't remember most of it.

I remember the departures board, too bright, the names of cities sliding past like a joke at my expense. I remember standing in the queue for the ticket counter and the floor tilting very slightly, the way a boat does before you've admitted to yourself that you're seasick. I remember a woman's voice asking if I was alright, and answering that I was fine, and not being able to find my own name for a moment when she asked for it. I remember sitting down somewhere that wasn't a chair. After that there is very little, until a paramedic was crouched in front of me asking me to follow his finger with my eyes, and I felt, more than anything else, embarrassed.

They called Emma. I don't know why they had her number and not my doctor's. Perhaps I'd written it somewhere in one of the guidebooks, on some form nobody was supposed to read.

She arrived before the ambulance had decided whether to take me anywhere. She didn't ask what I'd been thinking. She sat next to me on the plastic bench and said nothing at all for a long time, which was, I understood later, its own kind of answer.

At home she made tea neither of us drank.

"You could have told me," she said finally.

"I didn't tell myself."

She nodded slowly, like that made a strange kind of sense to her.

For the two weeks after that, I saw almost no one. Emma called most days; most days I let it ring out, and when I did pick up I gave her one-word answers until she gave up and said goodbye. I didn't open a guidebook. I didn't leave the apartment except for the mandatory follow-up, which I sat through without really listening. I was angry, though it took me a while to work out at whom — the illness, mostly, but also, unfairly, at Clara, for the postcard I now carried in my pocket everywhere and couldn't put down and couldn't look at for more than a few seconds at a time.

Then, on a Tuesday, Emma turned up anyway, without calling first, carrying a cardboard box.

"I don't know if this will do anything," she said, before I could ask. "I just didn't want to keep sitting there doing nothing." Inside were hundreds of folded slips of paper. Places. Every place she could think of.

I disliked the whole idea immediately, and said so.

"Fine," she said, and left the box on the table anyway.

For over a week I ignored it. She didn't push. She'd visit, glance at the box still sealed, and talk about something else entirely. On the ninth day, mostly out of boredom, I opened it.

Hundreds of folded slips stared back at me.

I unfolded one.

"The Isle of Skye."

Another.

"The world's largest ball of twine."

I looked at Emma.

"You got creative?"

She shrugged.

"I ran out of countries."

I smiled despite myself.

Then I reached in again.

Reykjavík.

She handed me a notebook without comment, the way you hand someone a tool and trust them to figure out what it's for.

The experiment lasted three months. Every day I selected a place, sometimes a city, sometimes a village with fewer people in it than my apartment building, and stayed there. One place. Not twenty.

I learned, that autumn, three words of Portuguese from a fisherman's blog entry, and said them out loud to the empty apartment one evening, feeling foolish, and said them again anyway.

Not every day went well. One afternoon I pushed the box away before Emma had even sat down.

"I don't want to pick anything today."

"Okay."

"I'm tired of pretending a slip of paper fixes anything."

She didn't argue. She sat with me in silence, then left without the notebook. I felt petty about it for days — snapping at a seventeen-year-old who had lugged a box across the city because she didn't know what else to do with an old man who'd tried to run away from an airport. She came back the following week as though nothing had happened.

Autumn arrived, then winter. The doctors stopped scheduling appointments very far ahead. The guidebooks gathered dust because I rarely reached for them anymore.

One evening Emma asked whether the experiment had worked.

I considered the question carefully.

"No."

"No?"

"No. The world is still impossibly large. And I'm still only one person."

"And?"

"But maybe that was never the problem."

The final entry in the notebook was written on a quiet February afternoon. Snow drifted beyond the windows. My hands trembled more than they used to. Writing took longer.

I stared at the blank page for several minutes. Then, instead of the island I'd read about that morning, I found myself writing about Lisbon. About the two tickets in a drawer. About a postcard I still hadn't shown anyone, that I now kept in that same drawer, because it seemed like the two things belonged together.

I will never see the place I meant to see with her.

For a long time that truth would have devastated me.

The world was never a book I was going to finish anyway — not because it's too big, but because it always needed two tickets, and somehow I only ever kept one.

I placed the pen down. Outside, snow kept falling.

Somewhere on the other side of the planet, dawn was breaking over oceans I would never cross. A fisherman was beginning his day, in a language of which I somehow knew three words.

The thought no longer filled me with sorrow.

Only something quieter, harder to name — closer to wonder than to grief, though not entirely free of either.

The world was larger than I could ever know.

And somehow, at last, that felt enough.

Posted Jul 03, 2026
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50 likes 72 comments

Maria Hoyle
08:47 Jul 13, 2026

Ooh I love this so much. It's the best sort of story; it explores deep themes like loss and regret and mortality and actually what gives life meaning, but with such a light and gentle touch. I loved the exchanges with the granddaughter (really liked this: "You think life is a collection project. Like Pokémon. My friend Sanne says the same thing about her mum and shoes"). And while this protagonist hasn't travelled widely, you know he has experienced something just as rich - in fact richer - ie true romantic love and now a close bond with his granddaughter. But you don't bash us over the head with it, instead giving us space to ponder the themes and relate them back to our own lives. Thank you for sharing!

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Marjolein Greebe
14:08 Jul 13, 2026

Thank you Maria,
Your extensive comment and kind words mean a lot to me. I'm happy to see quite some anchors came through as I hoped.

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Marty B
21:43 Jul 10, 2026

Some people love to travel alone, I like this MC, do not. I know that without someone I care for at my side to share the experience with other places don't mean as much, and become just two dimensional postcards.

This MC is longing for a different life, however it seems they have missed out on th eone they had. Im glad Emma connected him back to family.
Thanks!

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Marjolein Greebe
02:03 Jul 11, 2026

To be honest, I'm not someone who enjoys traveling alone either. I did it for years because of work, so I've been fortunate enough to visit quite a few places.
These days, we don't travel much because of my MS. Nevertheless, we managed to spend a week in Greece this April—all together as a family. I loved every single minute of it.

Thank you for sharing your personal thoughts and for giving such a thoughtful comment.

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Mark Schulze
13:55 Jul 16, 2026

I really enjoyed this. What struck me most was how the story quietly shifts from being about missed travel to something much deeper. By the end, it feels like the real loss was never Lisbon or all the places left unseen—it was the life and journey that were meant to be shared with Clara. That realization made the ending feel honest rather than sentimental. Beautifully done.
The writing is beautiful as usual and I admire how you can work with every prompt thrown at you. That is a wonderful talent. Well done.

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Marjolein Greebe
06:38 Jul 17, 2026

I'm happy that you liked it and how you described it.
Thank you so much for reading so closely.

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Akihiro Moroto
16:34 Jul 11, 2026

Time. We are all up against it. None of us is in control of when it expires- especially of those of our loved ones. Being vacuum sealed in grief after the loss sometimes forces the best of us to abandon our original trajectories and be consumed by the void.

This story was heartbreaking and yet also filled with one man's devotion to those he loves. I also commend Emma for trying her own way of getting through to her stubborn grandpa. He was reluctant, and yet her efforts did help him 'travel' and 'experience' learning different languages vicariously. She taught the dying man that he could still travel, within his means. Perhaps through that outreach, the widower was finally able to come to acceptance.

Such a beautiful, human story as always, Marjolein. Thank you for sharing!

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Marjolein Greebe
17:24 Jul 11, 2026

Thank you so much, Akihiro.

I always enjoy reading your interpretations because you often notice a layer I wasn't consciously writing toward. You described his grief as being "vacuum sealed," and I thought that was such a powerful way of putting it.

I'm also glad Emma resonated with you. She never tried to fix him or convince him he was wrong. She simply met him where he was, and sometimes that's enough to gently change someone's direction.

Thank you, as always, for such a thoughtful read.

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Akihiro Moroto
18:12 Jul 11, 2026

Sorry for the culinary lingo, but I couldn't find any other way to describe that level of grief that anchors a person down, where the heart becomes impenetrable, all while seemingly functioning, but anaerobically just coping. A broken heart could be such a complicated thing, isn't it?

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Marjolein Greebe
20:25 Jul 11, 2026

Thank you. I actually loved the culinary analogy.

A broken heart is indeed a complicated thing. People often keep functioning long after they've stopped feeling whole. That's exactly the kind of quiet grief I was trying to capture.

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Sarah Luster
15:01 Jul 10, 2026

Hi Marjolein!

I really loved your take on this on how regret and lived experiences in this piece.

The relationship between the narrator and Emma felt really natural and flowed quietly and calmly without being preacy.

This was a really thoughtful story, a really lovely break from my work day to settle into. Great work!

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Marjolein Greebe
10:39 Jul 11, 2026

Hi Sarah,

I'm always happy to receive your kind comments.

I'll stop by your profile soon to see what you've been reading and writing. 😊

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Marjolein Greebe
18:56 Jul 14, 2026

Hi Sarah,

It's often a friendly neck-and-neck race between my story and my dear friend The Old Izbushka for the top spot of the week. 😊

If you enjoyed it, I'd love it if you could give it a like as well.
Who knows... maybe I'll still catch him! 😄

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Ronaldo Chadinha
19:32 Jul 09, 2026

Wow... I am struggling to find it now, but the part where says "airlines feel lonely when they were not with the person your supposed to do it with." Was chilling, mainly cause my girlfriend and I will be flying to spain soon and it is our first trip together. This story is heart breaking and eye opening. Finite life and a large world to explore. I loved it, it was hard to put down. Thank you for the experience.

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Marjolein Greebe
17:57 Jul 14, 2026

Thank you so much.

I genuinely hope your first trip to Spain together becomes one of those memories you'll still be talking about decades from now.

Your comment perfectly captures what I hoped the story would leave behind: not regret, but the urge to stop postponing the things that matter most.

Wishing you both a wonderful journey—and thank you for sharing this with me.

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Ronaldo Chadinha
18:19 Jul 14, 2026

Thank you for the wishes. I am both excited and nervous. hate flying.

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Libby Ewoldt
02:11 Jul 09, 2026

This line though: "Grief settled into routine, routine hardened into habit, and habit quietly transformed itself into decades." So beautifully poignant. The whole story is such an incredible reflection of grief and healing and that thing called time that sneaks up on us all. Well done.

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Marjolein Greebe
18:04 Jul 14, 2026

Thank you so much. It means a lot that you singled out that sentence. It was one of those rare lines that seemed to write itself, and in many ways it became the emotional backbone of the story.

Thank you for reading so carefully. I really appreciate it.

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Graham Kinross
02:12 Jul 08, 2026

I appreciate traveling ambitions thwarted by the realities of life. It’s too easy to put things off and there’s never a right time, work, family, exhaustion. You can always think “later” until you’re the old man in Up looking back at your life. It’s great that unlike Carl your MC gets to learn about about the wonders of the world with a family member, doing it as if they’re in lockdown.

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Marjolein Greebe
12:56 Jul 08, 2026

Thank you.

I think "later" is one of the most dangerous words in the language. It sounds so harmless, yet it quietly steals years from us without ever announcing itself. Before we know it, the choices have been made for us.

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Graham Kinross
23:16 Jul 08, 2026

The peace deal will be signed later. You’ll get the tax rebate later. The money will trickle down later.

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David Poslad
06:03 Jul 06, 2026

I really liked how you portrayed a character by his wanderlust and how you were able to connect everything to it - his relationship with his wife, with his daughter. The urge to see the world became the storie's imagery. And isn't the yearning for other perspectives and other people's stories what makes us read in the first place?

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Marjolein Greebe
14:28 Jul 07, 2026

Thank you so much. I especially love your last thought, because that was one of the ideas quietly sitting beneath the surface while I was writing it. We travel to discover new places, but perhaps we read for exactly the same reason—to borrow someone else's perspective for a little while. I'm really happy that connection came across. Thank you for such a thoughtful comment.

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Eric Manske
19:40 Jul 05, 2026

Interesting to walk with him through the stages of grief. This reminds me of someone I knew who, once she retired from years of teaching, had plans to see the world with her husband. Unfortunately, he passed away within a year, and they did not get the opportunity. I never heard, but I hope she found time to go on her own or with friends, anyway.

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Marjolein Greebe
21:11 Jul 05, 2026

I didn't think about it that deeply while I was writing this story. It amazes me how many readers somehow relate to it.

Those are the comments I love most—when readers see parts of their own lives reflected in the story and make it their own.

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Aaron Luke
12:58 Jul 05, 2026

Hello Marjolein,
I can't tell what I liked more, the history between the protagonist and Clara or the essence of collection under the guise of travelling the world.
In short ways you have revealed the entire life of this man, from the time his parents died, to buying the apartment then his wife died and finally when he decided to travel the world. I appreciated Emma since she was that kind of character who challenged him based on his own travelling experience, it made him question everything and I liked that in a way, she filled the spot Clara had left.
I loved the essence that this story had to offer and the fact that it seems you had this before the prompts is amazing, this was such a good story and I can't thank you enough for writing it. I always love your stories, thanks for sharing.

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Marjolein Greebe
11:41 Jul 11, 2026

Thank you very much for such a kind and thoughtful reply.

The fact that I already had this story ready is less mysterious than it might seem.

A couple of weeks ago, one of the prompts was to write a story about a character who is running out of time.

This was supposed to be my entry for that prompt, but at the time the story simply wasn't good enough.

I finished it later anyway. Not specifically for Reedsy, but with the idea that if a suitable prompt ever came along, I'd have it ready.

Well... "ever" arrived unbelievably fast.

Pure luck.

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Aaron Luke
11:46 Jul 11, 2026

Very amazing, I can't wait for more of them.

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Jo Freitag
12:31 Jul 05, 2026

This story really resonated with me. I may have to move in the near future and have been sorting and discarding (sometimes shredding) a lifetime's worth of paperwork and books. And there are so many memories, sad and happy, attached to them. I liked your description of possibilities rather than memories; as that is how some of my sorting seems to be.
There is the acknowlegement of the world shrinking and closing in for many elderly people, especially after the death of their partner. I really appreciated the line 'it always needed two tickets'.
The characters of Emma and her grandfather and their relationship are so well portrayed.

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Marjolein Greebe
17:03 Jul 05, 2026

Thank you so much for sharing something so personal.
I'm glad you liked it.

Your comment reminded me that we're often not sorting through possessions at all—we're sorting through different versions of ourselves. It'll always be an interesting topic to think and talk about.

Thanks again and in case you have to move: succes!!

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Helen A Howard
08:53 Jul 05, 2026

For me, a profound story about time, longing, and physical limitations.
Yet for some it’s possible to mentally travel far further from one room than some who traverse most of the globe. Travel widens experience, but the way you look at life itself is what really counts. That’s the takeaway I got from your story.
Really well done. A moving and thought provoking story, Marjolein.

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Marjolein Greebe
17:53 Jul 14, 2026

Hi Helen, thank you so much.

I really like your interpretation. I hoped the story would become about more than travel itself, and you captured that beautifully. Sometimes the greatest journeys happen without taking a single step.

I truly appreciate that you (almost) always take the time to leave a comment.
That means more to me than you know.

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Alla A
04:12 Jul 05, 2026

Hello Marjoleine,

this is such a touching story. It brings back so many memories. As a kid, I also had a map of the world on my wall and I knew all the capital cities. I think, the desire to travel and see the world exists within each of us.
There are so many things that resonated with me, Especially, how we keep putting off the things that we really want to do in favor of the things that we have to do, always thinking that we still have plenty of time.

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Marjolein Greebe
16:55 Jul 05, 2026

Hi Alla,
Thanks for your kind words. It's true what you are writing. I think many of us do have similar thoughts and experiences.

Thank you again! Much appreciated.

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Marjolein Greebe
18:57 Jul 14, 2026

Hi Alla,

It's often a friendly neck-and-neck race between my story and my dear friend The Old Izbushka for the top spot of the week. 😊

If you enjoyed it, I'd love it if you could give it a like as well.
Who knows... maybe I'll still catch him! 😄

Reply

Danielle Lyon
22:18 Jul 04, 2026

First off, congratulations on being prescient enough to anticipate a prompt before it was released. I've only ever done that once, and it was practically cheating because it was Valentine's Day and I had (yet another) unrequited love story queued up.

You've chosen global travel as an entry point into this character's identity and life philosophy. It's both what he longs for (but shouldn't have), and a way of mourning his pre-deceased wife.

I think it's Emma who actually has this whole thing figured out (don't all 17 year olds?). She correctly skewers him about his idea of life as a "collection project." I'm going to take it a step further and say it's more than that; he's looking for a performance of a collection project. I think your narrator senses that even if he HAD the opportunity to visit these places, the destinations might feel hollow, always wondering what might have been if Clara had been there with him. Does the performance matter if no one who matters is there to witness it?

The narrator isn't all wrong, either. I think life is a collection project, though not a collection of things (Pokemon cards, shoes, or guidebooks), but moments. He was unlucky enough to be deprived of those specific moments with Clara, but I'm sure he collected plenty of moments with her, too.

You gave us the gorgeous parallel of letting go of the missed opportunities just as he's on the cusp of letting go of his remaining days. Perfect pacing, and perhaps one begat the other.

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Marjolein Greebe
22:47 Jul 04, 2026

Dearest Danielle,
Even more so now than back then, I have stories that were written long before I even knew Reedsy existed. Those tend to feel the most genuine to me because they weren't born from a prompt at all.
When a prompt happens to fit a story, rather than the other way around, it's a happy coincidence. Of course that doesn't happen every week. In fact, this story has absolutely nothing to do with this week's contest theme, Food for Thought. Sometimes the prompts and the stories simply cross paths at exactly the right moment.
As for your interpretation... I genuinely love it. Especially your distinction between collecting and performing a collection. I hadn't consciously framed it that way while writing, but once I read your comment, it felt strangely inevitable. Those are my favourite kinds of insights: the ones that reveal something about a story to its own author.
Thank you for reading so carefully and for taking the time to share such a thoughtful response. Comments like yours keep me thinking about my own stories long after I've posted them

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Scott Speck
20:14 Jul 04, 2026

I collected maps as a kid and wondered of many faraway lands. I can relate keenly to your protagonist's will too see the whole world, but it can never come true considering the size of Earth. I related strongly to the thought that with her being gone, journeying to any of those places wouldn't bring joy. Very moving storytelling, Marjolein!

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Marjolein Greebe
16:48 Jul 05, 2026

Hi Scott,

I'm glad you liked it.

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Rick B
16:58 Jul 04, 2026

I really felt this. When I was younger, I made maps and lists. I bought equipment and trail guides and topographical maps. In my mind, in my heart, I was going to hike all of the mountains. At least the non technical ones. It wasn't a love that was lost that scuttled those plans, just a bum knee. But for a long time that haunted me. Not being able to go to these places, hit these summits. Now I can't say what's worse getting to the end still holding on to that dream like a loss, or letting that dream go along with most others. The longing or the emptiness, neither seem very appealing.
Either way thank-you for the story, I really liked it.
I wish I could give you some useful craft feedback but I think your writing is far better than my own. The only thing that kind of confused me was the countdown idea. I don't have a lived in frame of reference so maybe the way you write it is accurate and maybe the confusion and uncertainty is the point. Anyway he mentions the doctors go from saying no more years not months weeks maybe days to no time at all but yet the story still continues as months continue to go by.
Again that's probably a real experience of a terminal illness. I was just thinking maybe a quick nod to it something like "they'd stopped offering projections, and yet the months kept arriving anyway, which was somehow worse."

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Marjolein Greebe
17:28 Jul 04, 2026

Hi Rick,
Thank you so much for such a thoughtful and generous comment.
Your reflection really stayed with me. I loved the way you framed it: whether it's harder to hold on to a dream until the very end, or to let it go and live with the emptiness it leaves behind. Neither is an appealing choice, and I think that's exactly the quiet tragedy so many people face.
I also had to smile when you said your plans weren't derailed by a lost love, but by... a bum knee. Life has a habit of rewriting our stories in ways we'd never expect.
As for the timeline...
I could tell you that my neighbour was diagnosed with cancer and given only a few months to live. He kept saying the same thing himself. He ended up living another four years. (That's a true story.)
But...
In this case, it's simply a timeline mistake on my part. 🙄
So thank you for catching it. It's a perfect example of why constructive feedback is so valuable. Comments like yours genuinely make stories better.
I really appreciate your careful reading and your sharp eye

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Rick B
18:09 Jul 04, 2026

Oh phew. I'm glad the reply was appreciated 😅 Thanks again for the story

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13:58 Jul 04, 2026

I liked how you captured the emotions of longing, regret, and quiet acceptance. The relationship between the narrator and Emma felt genuine and warm. I appreciated how she found a creative way to help her grandfather travel the world in his own way, using slips of paper and guidebooks. It showed her empathy and understanding and brought a sense of adventure and connection to their relationship. This is a really moving story. Great work!

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Marjolein Greebe
14:24 Jul 04, 2026

Thank you so much. I smiled when you mentioned the guidebooks and the slips of paper, because those small details were exactly where I hoped the story's heart would be. I'm really glad Emma's quiet way of helping him resonated with you. I appreciate you taking the time to share such a thoughtful comment.

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15:36 Jul 05, 2026

You're welcome.

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Mariyam G
11:58 Jul 04, 2026

I really enjoyed this story- it's touching and emotional without ever getting soppy. The idea of guidebooks as "possibilities" rather than memories is such a lovely touch. Emma's honesty and the way she challenges him (especially that bit where she points to a random patch of ocean) made their conversations feel properly real. And that final reflection about Lisbon and the two tickets was beautifully done - sad, but in a gentle, honest way. A really touching read that sticks with you :)

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Marjolein Greebe
14:30 Jul 04, 2026

Thank you! I love that you picked out Emma pointing at a random patch of ocean. That tiny moment was one of my favourites to write, so it's wonderful to hear it felt real to you. And I'm especially happy the ending landed the way I hoped—quiet rather than dramatic. I really appreciate your thoughtful words.

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Jim LaFleur
06:22 Jul 04, 2026

What a gorgeous, crushing piece of writing. The line about the guidebooks bringing back "possibilities" instead of memories completely rewired how I think about a life unlived. You captured the quiet ache of onism so beautifully. Great work!

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Marjolein Greebe
06:32 Jul 04, 2026

Jim,
Thanks a lot for your kind words. It means a lot

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