Sara didn’t like to talk about it, because she knew most people wouldn’t believe her.
She was a college student and going through a difficult semester. Her finals were about to start and she was spending all of her time studying. But she suddenly knew that something terrible had happened.
Sara had no idea what was wrong, but she associated it with her family, who lived a couple hundred miles away. She called her mother and asked if there was anything wrong, but her mother told her all was well.
In her heart, Sara was certain something was wrong, even if there was no rational reason to believe so. She went back to studying and made it through finals, but she never could shake the certainty that something was wrong.
After her last final, she drove home. When she arrived, her mother had some bad news. Her grandmother had died. The family had kept the news from her to avoid ruining her performance on finals. It turns out that the grandmother had died on the same day that Sara knew something was wrong and had called to ask about it.
But she has no idea how she knew something was wrong.

How would you live differently if you knew when death was coming?
Sharing ridiculous things we enjoy is a special part of love
Fear of terrifying future makes heart look to the past for clarity
If the state didn’t wither away for Marx and Engels, is there really a post-statist era ahead now?
In the old Ginger or Mary Ann debate, I wanted a third choice
What missed chances are you going to regret when it’s too late to change?
Voting Rights Act oversight rules should reflect today, not the past
Why are killing, maiming people elsewhere called moral, ‘legal’?