(Before You Turn the Page)
"Some lives are lived so quietly that the
world forgets to call them miracles."
This book is not gentle.
Not because it is loud, or angry, or
cruel—but because it tells the truth softly,
and softness is something the world has
never known how to handle.
We live in a time where sufering must be
dramatic to be noticed.
Where pain needs an audience.
Where stories are only valued if they shout,
bleed openly, or end with applause.
But what about the lives that were never
loud enough?
What about the women who woke up every
morning and carried pain the way others
carry breath—naturally, silently, without
complaint?
What about the souls who gave kindness so
consistently that it became invisible?
What about the people whose sacrifices
were so ordinary that the world mistook
them for duty?
This book exists because of one such life.
A life the world passed by.
A life history will never write about.
A life no textbook will ever mention.
A life that never demanded recognition, yet
deserved more than most legends ever did.
This is not a story about greatness as the
world defines it.
There are no crowns here.
No stages.
No victories celebrated by crowds.
This is a story about endurance.
About dignity.
About a woman who lived not to be
remembered, but to keep others standing.
And this is also a story about a child who
watched.
I was not old enough to understand injustice
when I first saw it.
I did not have the language for oppression,
or the vocabulary for emotional neglect.
But I knew something was wrong.
I knew, even before I could name it, that
some people sufer not because they are
weak—but because they are too kind in a
world that feeds on kindness and calls it
survival.
I grew up watching a woman give and give
until there was nothing left to give—
and then give again.
No bitterness.
No rebellion.
No demand.
Just quiet acceptance.
The world calls such people good.
I call them unprotected.
This book is written for those who were
never protected.
For the women who were taught that silence
is strength.
For the children who learned to stay quiet
because speaking never changed anything.
For the souls who were told that patience is
virtue, even when patience was slowly
destroying them.
And yes—this book is written for God too.
Not as a prayer.
Not as worship.
But as a question.
Because if kindness truly returns kindness,
then why do the kind sufer the most?
If karma is real, then why does cruelty sit on
comfortable thrones?
If faith is rewarded, then why do the faithful
bleed in silence?
I have been religious all my life.
I have joined my hands more times than I
can count.
I have believed, trusted, waited.
But belief does not erase confusion.
Faith does not silence grief.
Sometimes, faith sharpens it.This book does not try to answer these
questions.
It simply refuses to ignore them.
It refuses to dress sufering in poetic lies.
It refuses to romanticize sacrifice.
It refuses to call pain beautiful just to make
it easier to swallow.
Because pain is not beautiful.
Endurance is not a blessing.
And kindness should never cost someone
their entire life.
This book was written by someone young—
but do not mistake youth for ignorance.
I have seen enough to know that the world
is unfair.
I have felt enough to understand that
silence can be louder than screams.
And I have loved deeply enough to realize
that some losses begin long before death.
I wrote this not to accuse, but to remember.
Not to shame, but to witness.
Not to heal, but to tell the truth.
Because stories like hers disappear every
day.
Because lives like hers are buried without
markers.
Because the world keeps moving, and no
one stops to ask who was left behind.
This book is my way of stopping.
If you are looking for comfort, this book may
unsettle you.
If you are looking for inspiration, it may
ache.
If you are looking for heroes, you will find
one—
but she will not look the way you expect.
She will be ordinary.
And that is what makes her extraordinary.
Before you continue, I ask only one thing:
Read slowly.
Read honestly.
And when you feel uncomfortable, do not
turn away.
Some truths hurt because they are real.
And some souls were never meant to be
forgotten
