Y08W17RC Intention vs Impact Line

Most people know the difference between meaning to hurt someone and accidentally saying something that lands badly — but knowing that difference does not always make the situation easier to navigate. This week, you will read a short story that explores what it looks like to recognise that gap honestly and respond to it without making excuses. Pay attention to the small moments: this story's most important moves are quiet ones.

Literary — Realistic short story

A realistic short story is a brief, fictional narrative set in an ordinary, believable world — the kinds of situations and people you might actually encounter in everyday life. Writers use this form to explore emotional experiences and human behaviour in a way that feels immediate and true, letting readers see themselves or people they know in the characters' choices. You can expect to find a central situation involving tension or conflict, at least two characters whose perspectives matter, dialogue that reveals how people think and relate, and a resolution that grows out of what the characters decide to do. The story typically moves in order through time, following a short, focused sequence of events. As a reader, your job is to track both what happens on the surface and what is happening internally — noticing how each character understands the situation and what their choices reveal about them.

Before You Read

  • Look carefully at the title before you begin — the word 'still' is doing specific work, and thinking about what it implies will prepare you for the distinction the story explores.
  • Think about what most people know from everyday experience: that something said carelessly can land differently than it was meant, and that the gap between those two things — what was intended and what was felt — is often where conflict lives and where repair has to start.
  • This story is told from a close third-person perspective, so expect to spend time inside one character's thoughts and feelings rather than seeing events from a neutral distance.

While You Read

  • Track both characters' inner states as the story moves forward — notice when the narration shifts focus between what one character intends and what the other experiences, and pay attention to how those two things differ.
  • When dialogue appears, read it slowly and notice not just the words but what each character chooses not to say — silence and restraint often carry as much meaning as the spoken lines.
  • Notice the moments where a character feels the pull toward self-defence or explanation — consider what the story suggests about the difference between explaining and excusing.
  • Pay attention to the physical and behavioural details the writer uses to show how each character feels — these details do work that direct statements about emotion often cannot.

Read With Purpose

  • Notice the point where the concept of intention and impact is distinguished from each other — pay attention to how the story frames the relationship between the two.
  • Keep an eye on what the character who caused the harm actually does in response — notice how the story sequences the steps between recognising the problem and moving forward from it.
  • Consider what the outcome suggests about what repair actually requires — notice whether resolution comes from explanation, from acknowledgement, or from something else entirely.

Now read

The short story

~3 min read · ~587 words

Impact Still Counts

The comment came out of nowhere, as these things often do.

Liam and Declan had been working together on their history project for most of lunch, spread out across a table near the library. It was going well — they were laughing, talking over each other’s ideas, the kind of easy collaboration that made the work feel lighter. Then, in the middle of a sentence about something else entirely, Declan said it: a throwaway remark about the way Liam had pronounced a word, mimicking his accent with an exaggerated voice and a grin. It lasted about two seconds. Declan had already moved on before he noticed that Liam had not.

Liam had gone quiet. Not dramatically — he had not pushed back his chair or said anything sharp. He was still looking at his notes, but something had closed in him, the way a window shuts against weather.

Declan noticed. He replayed the moment in his head and felt a slow, uncomfortable recognition. He had not meant anything by it. He genuinely had not. The remark had come from the same place as a hundred other jokes between them — a habit of easy teasing that had never seemed to land badly before. But ‘before’ did not matter very much right now. What mattered was the expression on Liam’s face.

‘Hey,’ Declan said. ‘That came out wrong. I wasn’t trying to — I mean, I didn’t think about it.’

Liam looked up. He studied Declan for a moment, measuring something.

‘I know you probably didn’t mean it badly,’ Liam said. ‘But it still felt like something.’

There it was — the gap between intention and impact, the difference between what someone means to do and what actually lands on the other person. Declan had not intended to make Liam feel singled out or mocked for something as personal as the way he spoke. But the intent did not undo the impact. These were two separate things, and acknowledging that felt important.

‘I get that,’ Declan said. He paused, choosing his words more carefully than usual. ‘I think I’ve been doing that kind of thing without noticing. Using it as a joke when it’s actually — it’s your voice. It’s not mine to do that with.’

Liam nodded, slowly. ‘Yeah. That’s kind of it.’

It would have been easy for Declan to keep explaining himself — to layer more context onto his intentions, to walk Liam carefully through every reason why he had not meant harm. He felt the pull of that, the defensive instinct to be absolved without having to sit in the discomfort first. But he stayed with it instead, let the acknowledgement stand on its own without immediately softening it with excuses.

After a moment, Liam said: ‘I appreciate that you said something.’ He paused. ‘Most of the time people just get weird and hope I forget about it.’

‘I don’t want to do that,’ Declan said.

They returned to the project. The ease between them came back slowly, not all at once — more like a tide than a switch. By the time the bell rang, they had almost finished the section they had been working on, and Liam had made a joke about Declan’s handwriting that made them both laugh properly.

It was not a dramatic resolution. There had been no apology speech, no tearful moment, no scene. Just a small thing seen clearly, named without defensiveness, and responded to honestly. That, it turned out, was enough to let both of them move forward.

The next day, they finished the project.

Check your vocabulary knowledge

mimicking v.
copying someone's speech or manner, often in an exaggerated or mocking way
absolved v.
released from blame or guilt without having to fully reckon with what happened
acknowledgement n.
the act of recognising and accepting that something is true or has occurred
defensive adj.
reacting to protect oneself from criticism rather than openly engaging with it
resolution n.
the point at which a problem or conflict is settled or brought to a satisfying close