This was her lifestyle. Not curated. Not performative. Just small, glorious pockets of peace, stitched together with good wine, better company, and the quiet refusal to let the world dictate her downtime. As Billie crooned about strange fruit, Kendra thought: This is the only entertainment I need.
Kendra smiled, took the pot, and invited him in. By 7:45, Leo was laughing at Reginald the goat, and Kendra was teaching him the correct way to aerate soil with a chopstick. They ate leftover dumplings from the carton, and she didn’t check her phone once. kendra fucks
Her phone buzzed. A work email. She silenced it, placing it face-down on the rug. Another buzz—a group chat planning a loud Friday night she’d already declined. Silenced. This was her lifestyle
First, the soundtrack: a vinyl of Billie Holiday’s Lady in Satin , the pops and hisses warming the room like a familiar friend. Then, the ritual: she’d light a single rose-and-sandalwood candle on the coffee table, pour exactly four fingers of oaked chardonnay into a crystal glass she’d thrifted for three dollars, and pull out her “joy journal”—a battered leather notebook filled with movie tickets, pressed flowers from walks, and hastily scrawled lists of things that made her laugh that week. Just small, glorious pockets of peace, stitched together