Y07W06RC Friendship Check-In

This week's theme is about how to raise something that's bothering you in a friendship — without turning it into a fight. You'll be reading a short story that shows what a respectful, honest conversation between friends can look like. As you read, pay attention to the small choices each character makes and how those choices shape what happens next.

Literary — Realistic short story

A realistic short story is a piece of fiction that could plausibly happen in real life — the characters, settings, and situations feel familiar and believable, even though the story itself is invented. Writers use this form to explore how people think, feel, and relate to one another, inviting readers to connect emotionally with the characters and reflect on their own experiences. These stories typically unfold through a sequence of events, moving from a problem or tension toward some kind of shift or resolution, with dialogue and character reactions revealing meaning along the way. As a reader, your job is to follow how the characters are feeling and changing, track what drives their decisions, and think about what the story is showing — not just what it is telling.

Before You Read

  • The title gives you a clear signal about how this conversation is framed — consider what the difference might be between approaching something as a debate versus a check-in, and what that choice might mean for how things play out.
  • Think about how everyday friction in a friendship — a moment of feeling overlooked or not quite heard — can quietly build if it goes unaddressed. This is the kind of situation the story explores.
  • Because this is a story told through both narration and dialogue, expect to move between a character's inner thoughts and the words spoken out loud — both will give you important information.

While You Read

  • Track how each character is feeling at different points in the story — look for clues in what they say, what they choose not to say, and how they physically respond to each other.
  • When dialogue appears, slow down and consider not just what is being said but how it is being said — word choice and tone carry a lot of meaning in conversations like this one.
  • Notice when a character does something that could have gone differently — a moment where they could have reacted with frustration but chose another path instead.
  • If a section feels emotionally complex, re-read it before moving on, as small details in a realistic short story often carry weight that becomes clearer on a second pass.

Read With Purpose

  • Notice the moments where one character's choice seems to shift the direction of the conversation — pay attention to what makes those moments feel different from what came before.
  • Stay alert to what each character seems to want from this interaction, and how that shapes the way they speak and listen.
  • Consider how the story's ending feels compared to its opening — what has changed, and how much of that change came from how the conversation was handled.

Now read

The short story

~3 min read · ~518 words

Not a Debate, a Check-In

Priya had been replaying the moment all week. It was nothing dramatic — just Zoe laughing at something on her phone while Priya was mid-sentence, waving a hand as if to say ‘yeah, yeah’ without actually listening. It had stung more than Priya expected. By Thursday, a small distance had grown between them, the kind that does not announce itself but shows up in shorter replies and lunch tables chosen without asking.

That afternoon, walking out of science, Priya caught up with Zoe near the lockers. She had rehearsed a version of this conversation where she listed every grievance and waited for an apology. But somewhere between science and the corridor, she had quietly decided against it. She did not want to win an argument. She wanted her friend back.

‘Hey,’ Priya said, keeping her voice steady. ‘Can I talk to you about something? Not a big deal, but it’s been sitting with me.’

Zoe looked up, slightly wary. ‘Yeah, sure. What’s up?’

‘The other day when I was telling you about the drama camp callback — you kind of checked out halfway through. I know it probably wasn’t intentional, but I felt a bit dismissed. Like what I was saying didn’t matter.’

There was a pause. Priya had expected Zoe to get defensive, to say she had just been tired or that Priya was overreacting. Instead, Zoe leaned against the locker and exhaled slowly.

‘I didn’t realise I did that,’ she said. ‘I remember I was stressed about the maths test and I was only half-present, honestly. I’m sorry — I wasn’t trying to brush you off.’

Something in Priya’s chest unclenched. She had not expected the apology to come that quickly or to feel that genuine.

‘I figured it probably wasn’t on purpose,’ Priya said. ‘That’s why I wanted to mention it rather than just stewing on it.’

Zoe gave a small, rueful smile — the kind that carries both apology and self-awareness. ‘I’ve been pretty distracted lately. I think I’ve been doing it to a few people without noticing.’

‘That makes sense,’ Priya said. ‘Is everything alright with you?’

The question shifted something in the conversation. Zoe had come in expecting to be on the receiving end of a complaint. Instead, she found herself being asked about her own state of mind — and the difference was not lost on her.

‘Kind of,’ Zoe admitted. ‘A lot going on at home. Nothing catastrophic, just — a lot.’

‘Okay,’ Priya said simply. ‘I’m around if you want to talk about it.’

They stood there for a moment in the easy, comfortable way that friendship sometimes offers after tension has been acknowledged. Nothing was fully resolved — the stress at Zoe’s home was still there, and Priya still felt the residual sting of the moment — but something had been repaired, carefully and without drama.

As they headed to the tram stop together, Zoe said, ‘Next time I’m half-checked out, you’re allowed to pull me back.’

‘Deal,’ said Priya. ‘And next time you’re underwater, just tell me.’

It was not a grand gesture. It was just two people choosing to stay on the same side.

Check your vocabulary knowledge

intentional adj.
done on purpose, with awareness of what one is doing
dismissed adj.
made to feel that one's words or feelings were not worth attention
rueful adj.
showing mild regret or awareness of having done something wrong
residual adj.
remaining after the main part of something has passed or been dealt with
catastrophic adj.
extremely serious or devastating in scale or consequence