Sд±la Yoruldum Apr 2026

She looked at her phone. Three missed calls from her mother, likely about her brother’s debt. A dozen notifications from a group chat she no longer felt a part of. She realized she had spent her whole life answering everyone else's questions before she even knew what her own were.

The rain in Istanbul didn’t wash things away; it just made them heavier. For Sıla, the weight had become unbearable. She sat in a small, dimly lit café in Kadıköy, her fingers tracing the rim of a cold tea glass. The phrase yoruldum —I am tired—wasn’t just a thought; it was a pulse under her skin. SД±la Yoruldum

"I'm tired of being strong," she whispered to the steam rising from the tea. She looked at her phone

She stood up, leaving the tea untouched and the phone face down on the wooden table. For the first time in thirty years, Sıla didn’t head toward the ferry to go home. She walked toward the coast, toward the vast, dark expanse of the Marmara Sea. She realized she had spent her whole life

SД±la  Yoruldum