Over the past few weeks, I’ve noticed myself becoming a little quieter.
Not in the sense that I’ve stopped talking.
I still talk to people.
I still have conversations.
I still laugh at jokes.
I still send messages.
I still participate in life the same way I always have.
If you met me in person, you probably wouldn’t notice anything different.
The change happened somewhere deeper than that.
The real difference is that I’ve stopped talking about myself.
Or at least, I’ve stopped talking about the things that matter most.
The sadness.
The loneliness.
The anxiety.
The disappointments.
The fears.
The things that keep me awake at night.
The things that sit quietly in the background while I’m doing everything else.
Those conversations almost never leave my head anymore.
And strangely enough, life has become a little less painful because of it.
Not better.
Not happier.
Not healed.
Just less painful.
I think that’s the most honest way I can describe it.
Because people often mistake surrender for peace.
They mistake exhaustion for acceptance.
They mistake silence for healing.
Sometimes none of those things are true.
Sometimes you’re just tired.
Sometimes you’ve explained yourself so many times that you no longer have the energy to explain yourself again.
And I think that’s where I am right now.
Not healed.
Not enlightened.
Not transformed.
Just tired.
For most of my life, whenever I felt something deeply, I talked about it.
When I felt sad, I talked about it.
When I felt anxious, I talked about it.
When I felt hurt, I talked about it.
When I felt lonely, I talked about it.
I thought that was what people were supposed to do.
I thought sharing would make things lighter.
I thought vulnerability would create connection.
I thought honesty would lead to understanding.
I thought if I could find the right words, somebody would finally understand what was happening inside my head.
But more often than not, I walked away feeling worse.
Not because people were bad.
Not because people didn’t care.
But because no response ever seemed to match the size of what I was carrying.
There were misunderstandings.
There was unwanted advice.
There were explanations that led to more explanations.
There were conversations that somehow left me feeling lonelier than I felt before I opened my mouth.
And eventually, after enough of those experiences, something inside me changed.
I stopped reaching.
I stopped explaining.
I stopped trying.
Not because I became stronger.
Not because I became wiser.
But because I became exhausted.
Self-Censorship
Lately, I’ve been thinking about the phrase self-censorship.
Most people use it as a negative thing.
I don’t.
To be honest, self-censorship has made my life easier.
I censor my sadness.
I censor my anxiety.
I censor my loneliness.
I censor my disappointments.
I censor my heartbreaks.
Not because they aren’t real.
They are.
Not because I’ve overcome them.
I haven’t.
They simply stay inside now.
I’ve learned that not every feeling needs to become a conversation.
Not every wound needs an audience.
Not every lonely thought needs to leave the room it was born in.
The biggest change is that I’ve stopped outsourcing self-reassurance.
I used to do that constantly.
Whenever I was afraid, I looked outside myself.
Whenever I was uncertain, I looked outside myself.
Whenever I was lonely, I looked outside myself.
I was always searching for comfort.
For reassurance.
For understanding.
For proof that everything was going to be okay.
But eventually I realized something.
Nobody can sustainably provide those things for me.
Not because people don’t care.
But because they’re human.
They have their own lives.
Their own worries.
Their own burdens.
And even when somebody gave me exactly the reassurance I wanted, it never lasted.
The anxiety always came back.
The loneliness always came back.
The sadness always came back.
So now, when those things show up, I sit with them myself.
Not because it’s beautiful.
Not because it’s empowering.
Not because it’s some enlightened spiritual practice.
Simply because it hurts less.
Less painful.
That’s all.
“I’m Fine”
These days, when people ask me how I’m doing, I usually tell them I’m fine.
Even when I’m not.
Even when I’ve spent the entire day feeling anxious.
Even when I’ve been sitting alone with a heavy heart.
Even when I’ve been carrying thoughts I don’t know what to do with.
And maybe that’s dishonest.
I don’t know.
I think of it as privacy.
There was a time when I would’ve answered honestly.
Now I usually don’t.
Because I already know where the conversation leads.
More explaining.
More misunderstandings.
More disappointment.
More emotional labor.
More vulnerability.
And in the end, I still have to carry the original feeling myself anyway.
So I’ve stopped.
I say I’m fine.
We talk about work.
We talk about food.
We talk about movies.
We talk about the weather.
And honestly, I prefer it that way.
Surface-level conversations are underrated.
They’re clean.
They’re simple.
They don’t require me to hand somebody the fragile parts of myself and hope they know what to do with them.
Invisible
Perhaps now I understand something that used to confuse me.
Sometimes you hear stories about people who seemed happy.
They had friends.
They had family.
They had loving partners.
They laughed.
They went to work.
They showed up to dinner.
They made plans for the future.
And then one day, everyone around them says the same thing:
“There were no signs.”
“She seemed happy.”
“He seemed fine.”
“I had no idea.”
Maybe sometimes there really were no signs.
But maybe sometimes the signs simply stopped being shared.
Maybe after enough disappointment, enough failed attempts at being understood, enough exhausting conversations, a person simply becomes quiet.
Not healed.
Not better.
Just quiet.
Maybe the sadness is still there.
Maybe the anxiety is still there.
Maybe the loneliness is still there.
But after a while, carrying it alone feels easier than trying to explain it.
I think people underestimate how much suffering can exist beneath ordinary conversations.
How much loneliness can hide behind a smile.
How much anxiety can exist behind the words:
“I’m okay.”
The Version Most People Know
These days, most people know the version of me that lives above the surface.
The weather-report version.
The small-talk version.
The version that says everything is fine.
The version that smiles politely.
The version that knows how to move a conversation along.
The deeper version rarely comes out anymore.
Not because she disappeared.
Not because she died.
She’s still here.
She still feels everything.
She still notices everything.
She still gets hurt.
She still gets lonely.
She still lies awake at night thinking about things she cannot change.
She still carries old insecurities.
Old disappointments.
Old dreams.
But she no longer introduces herself to people.
She’s become private.
Not hidden.
Just private.
Five Percent
I want to be clear about something.
I am grateful for the people in my life.
I really am.
Every kind message.
Every conversation.
Every moment of companionship.
Every small act of care.
I appreciate all of it.
But I’ve also accepted something.
Those things make up a very small percentage of my emotional life.
Maybe five percent.
The other ninety-five percent belongs to me.
The sadness.
The loneliness.
The anxiety.
The long nights.
The private conversations inside my own head.
The disappointments I never mention.
The fears I never say out loud.
The questions nobody else can answer.
Those belong to me.
I carry them myself.
I always have.
And perhaps I always will.
At first, that realization felt devastating.
Now it feels strangely comforting.
Not because I like it.
Not because I think it’s fair.
But because I’ve stopped fighting it.
I’ve stopped waiting for somebody to finally arrive and make everything easier.
I’ve stopped waiting for life to become something different from what it already is.
And in that surrender, I found something that isn’t quite peace.
But it’s close enough.
Close enough to keep going.
Me, Myself, And I
At the end of the day, every person is fundamentally alone.
Not lonely.
Alone.
There is a difference.
No matter how loved we are, nobody can fully enter our mind.
Nobody can see every memory.
Nobody can feel every feeling.
Nobody can hear every thought.
There will always be rooms inside us that nobody else can enter.
For a long time, I fought that reality.
Now I just sit beside it.
One day, every conversation will end.
Every explanation will end.
Every attempt to be understood will end.
And when that day comes, the person who will still be there is the same person who has always been there.
The same person who sat through every insecurity.
Every heartbreak.
Every disappointment.
Every lonely night.
Every ordinary Tuesday.
Every quiet moment nobody else saw.
Me.
There is something strangely comforting about that.
Not because I have figured life out.
Not because I am happy.
Not because I am healed.
If anything, I feel more defeated than ever.
More tired than ever.
More aware than ever of how little control I have.
But perhaps there is a certain kind of freedom in finally admitting defeat.
Not dramatic defeat.
Not tragic defeat.
Just the quiet kind.
The kind that makes you stop fighting reality.
The kind that makes you stop expecting.
The kind that makes you stop explaining.
So these days, I speak less.
I explain less.
I expect less.
And I sit quietly with the only companion who has never once left my side.
Me.
Myself.
And I.
And together, we’ve learned how to endure.

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