Sometimes, I wish we didn’t end things in good terms.
That way, there’d be a reason to be angry, to resent you, to forget you faster. It would’ve been easier if I could just say, “Fuck you, and I never want to see you again,” and walk away with clean edges instead of soft wounds. Anger gives distance. It gives closure. It gives you the illusion that you deserve better.
But we didn’t have that. There was no third party, no betrayal, no falling out of love — it just had to end. And endings without villains are the hardest ones to heal from.
People talk about letting go as if it’s peaceful. They never talk about the ache that comes before peace — the brutal, unromantic part.
It’s not soft or poetic. It’s the kind of pain that sits in your chest long after the tears stop. It’s waking up and checking your phone out of muscle memory, then remembering they don’t reach out anymore. It’s erasing their name but still hearing it in songs. Letting go isn’t peace — it’s learning how to breathe in the emptiness they left behind.
It’s mourning someone who’s still alive, just no longer yours.
My youth is in your past, you’ll always have that
You’ll always have that — the version of me that was wide-eyed, hopeful, unguarded. The version that believed love was enough as long as we held on tight.
You carry the part of me that learned how to love in real time, that made mistakes gently, that tried even when it didn’t know how. You were there for the firsts — the first real fear of losing someone, the first real comfort of being understood, the first real heartbreak that didn’t come from betrayal but from inevitability.
That kind of me is sealed in you. You’ll always have that part of my story, even as I grow into someone new.
If time heals all, it’s a lousy doctor
I’ve realized that time never truly heals — it just gives you more time to become used to them not being around. That time just teaches you how to carry the ache differently. It doesn’t close the wound; it only teaches you how to stop touching it so often. It doesn’t erase the memory; it just blurs the edges until you can finally look at it without breaking.
Time doesn’t fix the emptiness someone leaves behind. It just makes that emptiness feel familiar.
I’m sorry we got lost
I’m sorry I couldn’t find a way to figure it out. I’m sorry that we couldn’t do anything about it. I’m sorry that loving each other wasn’t enough to save us.
But I’m grateful we tried.
Maybe we were too young to decide for our future. too young to understand what forever really demands. We dreamed big, but we didn’t know how heavy dreams can become when the world starts asking for more than love alone.
Still… I’m holding onto that tiny, stubborn hope that someday we’ll meet again.
I think about the what-ifs, the could-have-beens, the versions of us that might have survived. I wonder if I cross your mind the way you still cross mine. If you ever replay our moments and imagine what would’ve happened if we didn’t end. If you think our paths might meet again — and if you’d believe a second chance is worth it.
And though we didn’t last, I hope our paths cross again.
If someday we find our way back to each other, I hope it’s different.
I hope it doesn’t hurt.
I hope we’ve grown into people who can love with fewer doubts and more certainty.
I hope the timing finally aligns, softly, naturally.
