Facialabuse+mayli+amelia+wang

Together, they scribbled a plan: Amelia booked the first therapy session. Wang’s family, who’d healed generations of anxiety with talk of qìgōng and open hearts, let Mayli sleep on their futon. Amelia showed up with color pencils, painting stencils that covered Mayli’s scars in temporary tattoos—peacock feathers, galaxies, a single swan sailing across her cheekbone.

The trio met in the cherry blossom grove, where Wang’s grandmother once taught him to bind wounds with jasmine threads. Amelia brought her playlist of songs that “make you feel untouchable,” while Wang offered tea brewed with dried tulsi leaves. Mayli’s voice trembled when she finally spoke, not because the words were easy, but because they had never not been aching inside her. “It’s not a choice,” she said, “but it’s not the end, either.” facialabuse+mayli+amelia+wang

Possible conflict: Mayli might resist help initially, or her family is unaware. Amelia and Wang take initiative to support her. Together, they scribbled a plan: Amelia booked the

Need to make it respectful. Avoid trivializing self-harm. Show the support system instead of focusing on the harm itself. The trio met in the cherry blossom grove,

Conflict: Mayli's struggles with self-harm, leading her friends Amelia and Wang to help her. Resolution: Recovery, support, friendship.

Wang found them the next day. He’d been researching for hours—forums on mental health, local counselors, a documentary about self-harm as a cry for help. That night, he slid a handwritten notes into Mayli’s sketchbook (she filled the margins with doodles of birds mid-flight): “I know you’re not them. But maybe you want a different story?” Attached was a drawing he’d clumsily inked—a phoenix rising from ash.