
What I’m Carrying, What I’m Leaving
Some things don’t hurt in a clean way. They hurt in waves.
One minute the day looks normal. The next minute the head is full. Not full like “busy.” Full like there’s no space left. Full like every thought is talking at the same time.
There was a night where I read the same messages again and again until it stopped feeling like reading and started feeling like punishment. Hours gone. Eyes tired. Hands still holding the phone like it was the only thing keeping me from falling apart.
I kept going back because I wanted it to make sense.
It didn’t.
The hardest part is not even the words. The hardest part is what comes after. The silence. The space. The waiting. The feeling that something real is right there, but it can’t be held in a normal way.
That kind of situation makes you split in two.
One side of you wants to be calm, respectful, patient. The other side of you is shaking inside. Not because you want drama. Because the body knows something is wrong. Because the heart doesn’t understand why it has to act like it doesn’t feel.
And then there are the limits. The rules. The “not now.” The “not like this.” The “not too much.” The “be here, but don’t be real.”
That’s when the chest gets tight.
That’s when you start feeling stupid for even trying.
Because what is the point of being close if you can’t be honest? What is the point of time together if it has to be half real? What is the point of saying “this matters” if the actions say “keep it quiet”?
It messes with your head. It makes you question your own reality. It makes you replay everything and wonder if you imagined it.
And still, there were moments that felt true. Not perfect. Just true. The kind of moments that make you forget the rules for a second. The kind that make you feel seen without having to explain yourself. The kind that make you think, “This is what life is supposed to feel like.”
That contrast is what kills you.
Because when it’s good, it’s light. And when it’s not, it’s heavy in a way that sits in the body. You can’t talk it away. You can’t work it away. You can’t distract it away. You carry it into the next day like a bruise no one can see.
I also learned something ugly about myself.
Pressure doesn’t always show up as tears. Sometimes it shows up as control. Sometimes it shows up as silence. Sometimes it shows up as leaving.
There was a moment where someone needed me, and I sent them away. I flipped in a way I shouldn’t have. I chose the worst option. I acted from stress, not from respect.
And that’s the part that makes me feel sick.
Because it’s one thing to be hurt. It’s another thing to be the reason someone hurts.
People think saying sorry fixes it. It doesn’t. Sorry is not a reset button. Sorry doesn’t undo a night someone cried. Sorry doesn’t remove the memory of being sent away when it mattered.
And the worst part is knowing you can’t take it back.
You can only carry it.
You can only live with the fact that you became a bad moment in someone else’s life.
That thought changes you. Or at least it should.
It made me look at myself in a way I didn’t want to. It made me see how fast I can break when I’m under pressure. How quickly I can go from “I care” to “I can’t handle this.” How dangerous it is when you keep everything inside until it explodes.
And yes, it hurt me too. Not in a “feel sorry for me” way. In a “I have to live with what I did” way. In a “I don’t recognise myself in that moment” way.
There’s also another truth that’s hard to say out loud: sometimes you don’t even need jealousy to get destroyed. Sometimes the situation alone is enough. Sometimes the limits alone are enough. Sometimes knowing there are other priorities in the room is enough to cut you, even if you try to act mature about it.
Because the body doesn’t care how logical you are. The body reacts.
And when the body reacts, you start doing things you promised you wouldn’t do. You go back when you said you wouldn’t. You answer when you said you’d stay quiet. You accept less than you need just to keep a door open.
That’s not romance. That’s not strength. That’s a person trying not to lose something that feels rare.
I hate that part of me. The part that can’t resist. The part that knows it will hurt and still walks into it. The part that calls it “hope” when it’s really fear of emptiness.
And then there’s the final cruelty: disappearing.
Not drifting. Not life moving on. Disappearing.
Ignoring messages. Cutting contact like the other person never existed. Leaving someone stuck at home wondering if something terrible happened.
That kind of silence is violent. It makes the other person panic first. Then it makes them blame themselves. Then it leaves them with no ending. No dignity. No clean line to stand behind.
If something needs to end, end it with words. Even messy words. Even hard words. At least words.
Because silence turns into a prison.
This is what I’m trying to do now: stop running from hard conversations. Stop hiding behind stress. Stop acting like pressure gives me permission to break people.
I don’t want to be the person who sends someone away when things get heavy. I don’t want to be the person who flips and then tries to fix it after. I don’t want to be the person who only speaks when it’s too late.
I want to be steady. Not perfect. Steady.
And if I can’t be steady, I want to step back before I cause damage.
This is not a clean story. It doesn’t end with a nice lesson and a smile. It ends with me holding my own actions in my hands and admitting they were wrong.
If you’ve ever been in something that made you feel split in two, you know what I mean. If you’ve ever sent someone away when you should have stayed calm, you know that weight. If you’ve ever been sent away, you know the cold side of it too.
All I can say is this: don’t disappear. Don’t make silence do the job your courage should do. And don’t wait until pressure turns you into someone you don’t respect.
Say the hard thing earlier. Stay calm when it matters. Or step away with honesty.
That’s the only way I know to stop repeating the same pain.
If you’re reading this at the start of a new year, I hope you choose better than I did in the moments that mattered. I hope you don’t let stress turn you into someone you don’t respect. I hope you don’t disappear when things get hard. I hope you don’t send someone away when they needed you.
Say the hard thing earlier. Be honest earlier. Take a breath before you react. If you need space, ask for it with respect. If you need to leave, leave with words, not silence.
I’m not proud of my worst moment, but I’m not running from it either. I’m taking it with me as a warning.
No more “maybe.” Just real.
Happy New Year.
