I thought escaping the world would save us. I never expected the real storm would be inside our raft-and inside ourselves. When Eliot and I left everything behind-our jobs, our apartment, the noise of New York-we told ourselves we were chasing freedom. We bought a beat-up sailboat, renamed her Blue Meridian, and set off into the Pacific with no return date and no plan beyond movement and salt air. At first, it felt like a dream. Mornings with sunlit waves, nights under galaxies we never knew existed. We were finally alone, finally together-until the night a whale hit the hull and cracked it open like a tin can.Within minutes, the boat was gone. We climbed into a life raft with barely any supplies, no rescue signal, and only each other for comfort-or torment. For weeks-then months-we drifted. Starving, dehydrated, sunburned, delirious. But what haunts me most wasn't the ocean. It was the unraveling between us. Eliot turned inward. I turned angry. The raft became our confessional and our prison.We said things we couldn't take back. We remembered things we'd buried. And somewhere between the screaming and the silence, I realized: if we survived this, nothing about us would ever be the same. This is not just a story of shipwreck and survival. It's about the dangerous intimacy of isolation. About loving someone who's falling apart while you're trying to hold yourself together. About discovering what's left of a marriage when everything else has been stripped away. If you've ever wondered what it means to really be alone with someone-or with yourself-this is our story.