A switch flips.
A wall goes up.
A part of them pulls away, and no matter how hard you try, you might never reach that part again.google.com, pub-2494375772180737, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
Not because they want to distance themselves,
but because their body remembers the pain.
Their heart remembers the moment they realized you weren’t who they thought you were.
Their mind remembers all the questions they never had to ask before.
People like to say trust can be rebuilt.
But it doesn’t really work that way.
Once it cracks, it never fits quite the same.
It doesn’t feel the same.
It doesn’t carry the same weight.
You can’t undo the moment someone stops feeling safe with you.
You can’t erase that instant when their chest dropped and their stomach turned.
Once that version of them is gone—it’s gone.
Because when trust breaks, it doesn’t rebuild cleanly.
It rebuilds with caution.
It rebuilds behind walls.
It becomes something they guard, not something they give freely.
When you hurt someone deeply, you don’t just change how they see you.
You change how they move, love, react, and protect themselves—
for as long as they’re with you.
That’s the part people don’t talk about.
