Twins — Confiscated

The tragedy is not that we cannot have everything. The tragedy is that we can almost see the twin. We can imagine the other life with such vividness—the other city, the other partner, the other career, the other version of ourselves unburdened by the choices we made to survive. That twin is not a fantasy. It is a confiscated reality. When we speak of "confiscated twins," we must name the violence. Not the violence of malice, but the violence of finitude. Time confiscates. Biology confiscates. Geography confiscates. Money confiscates. Love, in its fierce demands, confiscates.

But confiscation always leaves a receipt. And the receipt is a lifetime of wondering. Consider the artist who became a banker. Every morning, he puts on a suit that fits perfectly. But in the quiet of the elevator, he feels the phantom limb of a paintbrush. That is the confiscated twin. Consider the woman who wanted children but built an empire instead, or the one who wanted an empire but raised a family instead. Neither choice is wrong. But the unchosen life does not evaporate. It takes up residence in the back of the mind, folding itself into the shape of a question: What if? confiscated twins

You are not just the person you became. You are also the person you chose not to be. And that person, that confiscated twin, is not your enemy. It is your measure of depth. It is the space inside you where all the unlived courage still glows. Honor it. Feed it small offerings of attention. Let it teach you that to be human is to be a crowd of selves, most of whom never got to speak. The tragedy is not that we cannot have everything