
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The Felonist reaches the strange, disorienting moment where she meets herself again — not the good girl, not the party girl, not the drama queen, not the caretaker, but the person underneath all of it. Who Are You? Do I Know You? captures the first flicker of recognition after months of unraveling: the shock of waking up with hope, the quiet clarity that arrives without warning, the realization that she can work, fight, rebuild, and choose differently. As she writes to Little Felonist, she begins to see the outlines of a self she has never truly known — someone imperfect, flawed, resilient, intuitive, and capable of starting over. This is the moment she asks the real question at the center of her story: Who are you, and do I know you? It is the beginning of self‑contact after a long disappearance, the first time she senses that the person she might become is not the one she was trained to be.
By The FelonistThe Felonist reaches the strange, disorienting moment where she meets herself again — not the good girl, not the party girl, not the drama queen, not the caretaker, but the person underneath all of it. Who Are You? Do I Know You? captures the first flicker of recognition after months of unraveling: the shock of waking up with hope, the quiet clarity that arrives without warning, the realization that she can work, fight, rebuild, and choose differently. As she writes to Little Felonist, she begins to see the outlines of a self she has never truly known — someone imperfect, flawed, resilient, intuitive, and capable of starting over. This is the moment she asks the real question at the center of her story: Who are you, and do I know you? It is the beginning of self‑contact after a long disappearance, the first time she senses that the person she might become is not the one she was trained to be.