
Understanding a pattern and being free of it are not the same thing.
I knew what I had survived. I had language for it — the way absence becomes leverage, the way presence becomes obligation, the way love gets measured in what you’re willing to endure.
I told myself that knowing was enough.
It wasn’t.
A few months after everything ended, I met someone new. An artist. We talked about music, about building, about creative work that feels like it costs something. I offered him space on my sim. I told myself it was generosity.
Then, a few days later, I wrote to him.
I told him I had been thinking about him. That I could see he was standing in the center of something chaotic. That I was there to listen, anytime he needed.
I attached a poem by e.e. cummings — somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond.
What I didn’t say — what I hadn’t yet admitted to myself — was the real reason I reached out.
I believed I could be for him what no one had ever been for me.
I had grown up without that kind of steadiness. No one who simply stayed. No one who listened without condition or made space without asking something in return.
And without realizing it, I had begun to believe that offering that steadiness to someone else might finally make sense of not having received it myself.
What I hadn’t yet recognized was the quieter truth:
I had already done that for myself.
Everything I survived, I survived without rescue. Everything I built — my stability, my independence, my ability to keep going — I built myself. Not because no one cared. But because somewhere along the way, I learned how to carry my own weight forward.
I just didn’t know it yet.
So I reached toward someone else’s chaos instead.
With a poem.
The way I always had.
This is what knowing doesn’t fix.
The body remembers what it was trained for long before the mind catches up.