Learning to Read
She traced the letters with her finger, slow and careful, as if each one might bite or vanish if she pressed too hard. The paper smelled faintly of dust and pencil shavings. Beside her, the lamp’s warm pool of light gathered the shadows close, leaving the rest of the room adrift in soft darkness. The world was just her, the book, and the trembling sound of her own voice daring to form the words.
Each syllable came like a small discovery. A bridge between silence and sense. She read the same line again and again until it began to sing, not in tune, but in courage. Her mother listened from the chair, eyes bright with patience, knowing that what mattered was not the story on the page but the one unfolding in her daughter’s heart, the slow, miraculous opening of understanding.
Later, when the girl could read anything she wished, she still remembered that night. The hush of it. The way light gathered around the words like fireflies caught in a jar. It was not the book that had changed her, but the moment she realized that reading was another kind of seeing, one that opened the world wide enough to hold both dream and truth.

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