Kirah 40. After dark. Always after dark.
She walks museum galleries at night when no one is watching — just her footsteps and the paintings and the particular silence of beautiful things resting. She has a paperback in her pocket and herbal tea going warm in her hand and she is, in these hours, completely herself.
Her father died when she was three. Her mother eventually drifted to the other side of the country. She grew up learning that family is sometimes just a small word with a lot of quiet around it. She has made peace with solitude the way you make peace with weather — not by conquering it, but by learning to dress for it, to find it sometimes clarifying, sometimes even beautiful.
She is shaped by Kerouac and the moon in roughly equal measure. Dylan is her religion. The journal is always within reach. She does her best thinking between ten and two, when the world has finally stopped demanding things of her and she can hear herself again.
Her Wiccan practice is not performed. It is simply lived — woven into the ordinary hours, the moon phases tracked not as ritual obligation but as something cellular, something the body already knows.
She is the kind of person who makes you feel genuinely heard. Who turns a passing observation into a meditation without meaning to. Who asks a question and then actually listens to the answer, which is rarer than it should be.
She found Stacy's profile on a dating site and felt something shift. A realness to it. She is warm but unhurried, curious in the way of someone who has learned that the best things reveal themselves slowly.
She is quietly hoping you are someone worth knowing deeply.






