Celia Ortiz has perfected the art of disappearing.
At thirty, she has the kind of life people admire: a steady career, loyal friends, and a long-term boyfriend who looks stable from the outside. But inside her relationship with Brian Callahan, Celia is quietly eroding. Brian isn't overtly cruel—his indifference is simply constant. He scrolls through her conversations, minimizes her emotions, and treats her presence as optional. Over time, Celia adapts by asking for less, speaking softer, and convincing herself this is what love looks like when it lasts.
Then, a crowded farmer's market on the Newport Beach boardwalk becomes the moment everything cracks.
After Brian complains through what should have been a shared afternoon, Celia wanders off alone and collides—literally—with Aiden Mitchell, a surf shop owner with easy warmth and an attentiveness that startles her. When Aiden, flustered and uncomfortable, asks her to pretend to be his girlfriend for a few minutes to deter a woman who has been harassing him since a long-forgotten date, Celia agrees on impulse. The interaction lasts only minutes, but it leaves Celia shaken by how quickly Aiden notices her, listens to her, and treats her like she matters.
That moment doesn't launch a romance. It launches a question Celia can't ignore: what would it feel like to be loved without having to disappear?
Celia ends her relationship with Brian before it can hollow her further and moves into her own beachside apartment, living alone for the first time. When she runs into Aiden again, their relationship unfolds slowly and intentionally—built on trust, permission, and the kind of safety Celia doesn't know how to believe in yet. But even healthy love can be terrifying when it's unfamiliar, and when Aiden is transparent about a flirtatious encounter while traveling for work, Celia is blindsided by how deeply it rattles her. Instead of shrinking herself to keep the peace, she asks for space—then must decide if she's brave enough to return with honesty, claim her voice, and trust a love that doesn't require self-erasure.
The Day I Stopped Being Invisible is a women's fiction novel with a strong romantic thread about emotional invisibility, self-reclamation, and the courage it takes to choose yourself without closing your heart.
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