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The Quiet Way She Spoke: The Quiet Way She Spoke, #1
Coles
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The Quiet Way She Spoke: The Quiet Way She Spoke, #1 in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $6.99

Coles
The Quiet Way She Spoke: The Quiet Way She Spoke, #1 in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $6.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
The Quiet Way She Spoke
This book was not written all at once.
It was written in pauses.
In moments where language failed but the body remembered.
Some stories do not arrive as sentences.
They arrive as behavior.
As fear.
As silence that grows louder the longer it is ignored.
A child does not always speak in words.
Sometimes he speaks in flinches.
In withdrawn laughter.
In the way his shoulders tighten when a door closes.
In the way his body learns to stay alert when safety feels uncertain.
Silence is often mistaken for calm.
But silence in a child is rarely peace.
It is calculation.
A decision made before language has fully formed.
A way to survive when speaking feels dangerous.
Children learn quickly who listens and who looks away.
They learn which truths are welcomed
and which ones cost them safety.
When a child stops speaking
the world often congratulates itself
for finally having quiet.
Adults often look for disclosure as proof.
They wait for the sentence that makes it undeniable.
They ask for clarity from someone who is still learning how to survive.
But children do not speak in legal language.
They speak in avoidance.
In stomachaches that arrive every morning.
The Quiet Way She Spoke
This book was not written all at once.
It was written in pauses.
In moments where language failed but the body remembered.
Some stories do not arrive as sentences.
They arrive as behavior.
As fear.
As silence that grows louder the longer it is ignored.
A child does not always speak in words.
Sometimes he speaks in flinches.
In withdrawn laughter.
In the way his shoulders tighten when a door closes.
In the way his body learns to stay alert when safety feels uncertain.
Silence is often mistaken for calm.
But silence in a child is rarely peace.
It is calculation.
A decision made before language has fully formed.
A way to survive when speaking feels dangerous.
Children learn quickly who listens and who looks away.
They learn which truths are welcomed
and which ones cost them safety.
When a child stops speaking
the world often congratulates itself
for finally having quiet.
Adults often look for disclosure as proof.
They wait for the sentence that makes it undeniable.
They ask for clarity from someone who is still learning how to survive.
But children do not speak in legal language.
They speak in avoidance.
In stomachaches that arrive every morning.


















