In a small living room on a fading evening, a father and son have a conversation that changes everything.
When Son asks his father a hypothetical question—"If everyone could see each other's whole life for a day, what would change?"—neither expects where the conversation will lead. What begins as philosophical wondering becomes deeply personal as Son reveals a painful truth about someone he thought he knew, someone who seemed to have everything together.
Through their dialogue, they explore questions that haunt our modern world: Why do we envy what we can see while missing what matters? Can a game be unfair if everyone plays by the same rules? What happens when the performance of perfection becomes so convincing that asking for help feels impossible?
If Everyone Could See is an intimate, thought-provoking exploration of privilege, struggle, and the stories we tell ourselves about success and failure. It's a play about the courage it takes to ask twice when someone says they're fine, and the transformation that happens when we finally see past the surface.
"Behind every polished image is a human being carrying something unseen."