lexxxiiee_xo
Angelina is magnetic. Beautiful in a way that stops rooms. Funny, sharp, impossible to ignore. People orbit her like she's the sun, mistaking her confidence for safety, her laughter for ease. No one sees how carefully she holds herself together.
Told in Angelina's voice, this book follows Angelina who lives in extremes-intensity mistaken for chaos, longing disguised as independence, love that feels like both oxygen and threat. As relationships deepen and cracks begin to show, the line between connection and abandonment blurs.
What looks like self-sabotage is often survival. What feels like too much is really fear of never being enough.
With dark humor, emotional intimacy, and slow-burn tension, Too Much, Never Enough explores trauma, attachment, and the quiet violence of being misunderstood-especially when you're the most desired person in the room.
This is not a redemption story. It's a recognition.For anyone who has loved too hard, felt too deeply, or learned to perform strength just to stay.
Too Much, Never Enough is a story about being unforgettable-and never feeling chosen.