She stopped walking. She turned to face the tourist directly. She didn’t smile, but she didn’t frown either. She simply stood . In her black leather boots and long cashmere coat, she looked like a gentle tower, a lighthouse in a fog of ordinary people.
Basketball had taught her the geometry of space. She could see over the defense, pass into pockets of air that didn't exist to shorter players. But modeling taught her something stranger: the power of owning the vertical.
She slipped out of the hotel’s back entrance, ducking under the awning. Milan in autumn smelled of espresso and wet cobblestones. A group of tourists spotted her. A man nudged his wife. A child pointed. ekaterina lisina
“Would you like the photo to be straight?” she asked in clear, accented English.
Ekaterina Lisina loved the quiet hum of the hotel elevator. For sixty seconds, she was alone. The doors would slide open to reveal the gasps, the double-takes, and the inevitable, “ Bozhe moi —how tall are you?” She stopped walking
Tonight, she was in Milan, walking a runway for a couture designer who didn't have to hem his pants. The theme was "Giants of the Earth." She almost laughed at the irony. For most of her life, people had treated her height as a spectacle, a freak-show banner. In Russia, the boys on the basketball court called her Spichka —Matchstick. Not out of cruelty, but out of a fear they couldn't name.
She turned the corner, disappeared into the Italian night, and left behind only the echo of her footsteps—a slow, steady rhythm, one giant step at a time. She simply stood
She needed only to exist, loudly and unapologetically, until the gasps turned into glances, and the glances turned into a simple, quiet nod of recognition.