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Logroño · an 11-month-old and a 3-year-old · together 5 years
At 5:48 AM, Borja heads out for his hospital shift with coffee in hand and his sweatshirt on inside out. Elsa hasn't opened her eyes because the little one woke up twice in the night. Before leaving, he drops a photo of the breakfast he made her onto her phone, with a note that simply reads back by three, breathe. She sees it when their daughter asks about her milk. She doesn't reply — she doesn't need to. At 12:39 PM, during Borja's break, Elsa leaves him a photo of the baby asleep on the couch with the word here written over it. That's the whole situation report they'll share until tonight.
Pamplona · two teenagers, 14 and 16 · together 18 years
They've spent years unable to close the bedroom door without someone walking in to ask something. They write to each other through LockLove without the kids knowing it exists, because the app doesn't ring or alert. Sebastián leaves Noelia a photo of the Magdalena promenade at 10:11 AM on his way to work, with the word together. She sees it when she stops for gas at 11:47 AM. At night, after fighting over math homework, Noelia unlocks her phone and it's still there. It's the only place in the house no one else looks.
Vigo · a 7-year-old daughter · together 9 years
Their daughter has started peeking at mom's phone every time she leaves it on the table. Alma and Kenji had stopped writing each other sweet things out of fear the kid would read them. With LockLove they went back to the habit: the drawings and photos appear as a wallpaper, not in WhatsApp. At 4:58 PM, when Alma picks their daughter up from school, Kenji leaves her a photo of his office window with a sticky note that says waiting for you for dinner. It's the first thing she sees when she unlocks her phone to check the school group chat. And she's no longer alone in the pickup line.
There's a running tally busy parents keep in their heads without realizing it. It's the tally of pending gestures. The kiss you were going to give her this morning but the little one had a fever. The call you were going to make him mid-afternoon but a meeting came up. The I love you you've been wanting to say for three days that always ends up buried under something more urgent. Love, with kids in the house, becomes a silent accounting of things you never quite got around to doing.
The couples who keep being a couple inside the hurricane learned to say presence to each other in micro-invisible gestures.
For years the answer to that was to just accept it. This is what it is. Calmer years will come. We'll have time when they're older. The problem is that it's not true: the calm years never arrive on their own, and couples who wait until they have time to love each other usually discover that time was never the problem — the problem was that they'd forgotten the language. The couples who keep being a couple inside the hurricane aren't the ones with more time. They're the ones who learned to say presence to each other in micro-invisible gestures.
LockLove isn't going to give you the hours back. Nothing will. What it can do is rescue the thirty seconds you already have and turn them into something that lasts until tomorrow. A photo of the breakfast mug. A silly drawing scratched out with your finger while you wait for the water to boil. The baby's face asleep, so the other person can see it at three in the afternoon in the middle of a brutal meeting. Not more messages. Better ones. No notifications. No alerts. Just magic, appearing on the screen right when it was needed. From Barcelona, with love — for every household where love is still alive even when there's no time to prove it.
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