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I Lived One Day Twice — And the Second Time, I Saved a Life

It wasn’t déjà vu. It was a second chance… but only for one day. ________________________________________

By Muhammad Arif Published 7 months ago 3 min read

I. It Started With a Flash

I remember the exact moment it happened.

It was 3:47 PM on a cold Tuesday afternoon. I was crossing the street on 8th and Main, coffee in one hand, phone in the other, when a flash of white light exploded in my vision — like a camera flash times a thousand.

Everything went silent. The honking. The city noise. The chatter. Gone.

When I opened my eyes, I was standing at the crosswalk again. Same coffee. Same phone. Same weather. But when I looked up at the digital clock outside the bank, my stomach turned.

It was 7:42 AM.

Same day. Reset.

________________________________________

II. The Glitch

I thought I was losing it.

Maybe I had dreamed the whole afternoon? But the strange thing was — I remembered everything from the day that hadn’t “happened” yet. The spilled coffee at 10 AM. My boss chewing me out at 1:30 PM. Even a flat tire at 6:12 PM.

And most of all — the part that shook me the most — a car accident at 5:03 PM.

A young girl was hit by a speeding car right outside the drugstore near my building. I hadn’t known her. I’d only been a bystander. But I remembered the color of her shoes, the scream of her mother, and the sound of the sirens.

Now, I was living that day again.

And I knew when and where that girl was going to die.

________________________________________

III. The Decision

I sat at work staring at the clock all day. I ignored the coffee spill. Didn’t argue with my boss. Watched my tire avoid the nail I had seen earlier.

But mostly, I waited for 5:03 PM.

At 4:45, I walked to the drugstore. Stood across the street. Same people. Same shadows. Same chill in the air.

And then I saw her — the little girl, maybe eight years old, in a blue coat and red sneakers. She was holding a balloon.

5:01 PM.

Her mother was distracted on her phone. The girl, curious, started stepping toward the edge of the sidewalk.

5:02 PM.

The car — a black Honda with a busted headlight — was already speeding down the hill.

5:03 PM.

I ran.

I don’t remember the scream. Or the impact. Just darkness.

________________________________________

IV. Waking Up… Again

The first thing I noticed was the smell of bleach and the quiet beep of a heart monitor. Hospital.

My ribs ached. My head was bandaged. But I was alive.

And so was she.

Her mother came into my room three days later. She was crying. She called me a hero. I didn’t feel like one. I just did what anyone would’ve done — if they knew what I knew.

But here’s the thing.

I thought I’d just been given one second chance. A one-off, cosmic fluke.

I was wrong.

________________________________________

V. The Pattern

Exactly a month later, I experienced the flash again.

Same reset. Same day. And once again, I retained everything from the “first” version of that day.

That time, it was a co-worker choking in the break room. The first time around, no one noticed. He died before the ambulance arrived.

Second time? I spilled water to cause a scene, got him noticed, and saved him.

Then it happened again.

And again.

Always with a flash. Always resetting to the morning of a day where someone was going to die.

________________________________________

VI. The Truth That Scares Me

I don’t know why this is happening.

I’ve never seen aliens. I wasn’t part of a government program. I didn’t make a deal with God.

But every now and then, time gives me a do-over — just one — to fix something.

It’s never for me. I can’t save money, change my life, or avoid heartbreak. I’ve tried. The only changes that “stick” are the ones where someone else lives because of me.

I’ve become a ghost in my own life. Wandering. Waiting for the next glitch.

But I’ll keep doing it.

Because someone out there only lives if I do.

________________________________________

VII. What Would You Do?

Have you ever lived a moment so clearly you swore it had already happened?

What if it had — but only to you?

And what if that moment was someone else’s last?

I don’t know how many more of these “flashes” I’ll get. I don’t know who chooses them, or why. But I know this:

The next time I wake up in the past…

I’ll be ready.

MysteryShort Story

About the Creator

Muhammad Arif

I'm a storyteller by heart and passion. I believe that stories are more than just words — they are windows into the emotions we often leave unspoken. My writing explores the quiet corners of everyday life.

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  • Muhammad Waleed Hassan7 months ago

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