When healing means silence—and learning that not everyone deserves your ‘why.’
Once upon a time,
I believed that if they just understood,
they’d finally care.
If I found the right words,
if I softened the truth,
if I handed them my pain in digestible pieces—
They’d stay.
They’d change.
They’d see me.
So I explained.
Over and over.
Until my truth was diluted into something they could handle.
But they still didn’t listen.
Because they weren’t confused.
They were cowards.
And my explanations just gave them more material to ignore.
I thought being honest made me brave.
But sometimes, it just made me available to people who never earned access.
Then one day—no drama, no warning—I stopped.
No long text.
No big speech.
No final attempt to be understood by people who were committed to misunderstanding me.
Just silence.
And in that silence,
I heard my own peace returning.
Healing didn’t sound like forgiveness.
It sounded like “not your business anymore.”
It sounded like not needing to be right.
Not needing to be believed.
Not needing anything from anyone who couldn’t meet me where I stood.
Let them think what they want.
Let them build their story.
Let them use my name like punctuation in their version.
I don’t owe anyone an explanation for surviving.
Not anymore.
🧠 Emotional Takeaway:
You don’t have to justify your healing.
Not to your family.
Not to your ex.
Not to your old best friend who loved you more when you were a mess.
Silence isn’t weakness.
It’s closure without their permission.
🪞 Reflection Box:
I wasted years trying to make people comfortable with my growth.
Years defending boundaries to people who never honored them.
Years trying to prove my trauma wasn’t “too much.”
And then I realized:
The right people won’t need an explanation.
And the wrong ones won’t listen anyway.
🎤I used to beg for them to see
The broken parts inside of me.
I shaped my pain to fit their size—
Wrapped truth in calm, and called it wise.
But every “why” I tried to give
Just taught me how not to live.
So I went quiet. Closed that gate.
Left them alone with all their hate.
I found my voice inside the hush.
A healing scream that doesn’t rush.
And now I live without that chore—
Explaining myself
to cowards no more.
