The Subtle Disappearance of Self
When love ends, it rarely walks away quietly. It takes pieces of you with it, the version that laughed differently around them, the one who dreamt in their language, who felt safe inside their gaze.
Heartbreak doesn’t just empty your heart; it steals your sense of self.
One moment you’re someone’s person, and the next you’re staring at your reflection, trying to remember who you were before you started saying “we” instead of “I.”
It’s strange how easily identity dissolves in love. You start adopting their habits, liking their music, adjusting your edges to fit theirs. You call it compromise, connection, growth. You don’t realize you’ve been blurring your own outline until the day they leave, and suddenly, you can’t tell where they end and you begin.
There’s a silence after heartbreak that doesn’t just ache; it confuses. You make your coffee the way they like it. You reach for your phone at night, half-expecting their name to light up the screen. You listen to songs you both loved, and each lyric sounds like a ghost. It’s not the absence of them that hurts most; it’s the absence of you in your own life.
And yet, that’s where healing begins, in the small, unremarkable moments when you start coming back to yourself. The…
