Chapter 36 - Vic
She wasn’t just a friend—she was the first person who ever believed in Holodex. It started with a modest investment and a few early ideas, but even then, it felt like I had something real in my hands—something I was pushing toward with every bit of my energy. But as the project grew, so did the distance between me and the people I had once considered close.
Vic and I had been practically inseparable at one point. We shared countless nights, laughter, and ideas. We’d dreamed about the future together, imagining what could be. So when she made the decision to invest, no matter how small, it felt like validation. It felt like she believed in me. But then, everything started to change.
It was subtle at first. A couple of missed calls here and there, a lack of response when I reached out to talk about the project, and finally, a noticeable absence in our conversations. At the time, I couldn’t make sense of it. I had no idea why the friendship seemed to drift away, why she—and later, three of our mutual friends—stopped talking to me altogether. It was like I was being pushed out of the circle, and I had no clue why.
That kind of rejection, especially from people you considered close, can be incredibly isolating. And the more I thought about it, the more it felt like a form of bullying. It’s one thing to be excluded, but it’s another to feel like there’s a subtle, unspoken reason behind it. It’s like being cut off without anyone ever explaining why. There were no harsh words, no confrontations—just silence and the cold realisation that everything had changed.
But what made things even stranger was the timing. Vic, my former close friend, ended up working with Eskimo, the very company that would later offer me a job. The coincidences started stacking up. I couldn’t help but feel like the universe was playing a strange joke. What were the chances that I’d end up working at the same place, in the same industry, as people who had effectively distanced themselves from me? Was it all just a weird twist of fate, or was there something more to the story that I wasn’t seeing?
I spent a lot of time reflecting on these odd intersections of my life, questioning how much of it was simply the randomness of the universe, or if there was a deeper reason behind the events I couldn’t quite explain. Sometimes, I wonder if those experiences—those moments of rejection—were part of something bigger, part of a path that was guiding me toward something greater, even if I couldn’t fully see it at the time.
In many ways, these questions, these moments of confusion and disbelief, shaped how I viewed the world. They forced me to dig deeper into myself, to question everything, and to keep pushing forward even when things didn’t make sense. Because in the end, that’s all you can do: keep moving forward, keep questioning, and keep believing that somehow, it will all make sense in the end.