I used to say it like a joke, like something dramatic I would never actually have to prove, that I would burn the whole city down if I ever saw you with someone else. It sounded bold, a little unhinged, and very convincing at the time, especially because you were always there, always choosing me in ways I never fully returned.
You made it easy for me to stay in that position. You were consistent, patient, and annoyingly sure about me, even when I kept giving you reasons not to be. And the truth is, I did like you. I just didn’t like you enough to risk everything that came with you. We shared the same space, the same people, the same comfort, and I was too aware of what could go wrong if we crossed that line. I told myself I was being realistic, that I was protecting both of us, that saying no was the smarter choice.
So I said no. More than once. In different ways, with different reasons, but always with the same outcome. And you respected it. You stayed for a while, still close, still present, still trying in smaller, quieter ways, until eventually you stopped.
At first, I didn’t notice the shift. Or maybe I did, but I chose to ignore it because it was more convenient to believe that nothing had really changed. You just texted less, showed up differently, laughed a little less with me, and I told myself it was normal. People get busy. People change. It didn’t mean anything.
But it did.
Because the version of you that used to choose me without hesitation slowly disappeared, and I didn’t realize how much I relied on that until it was gone. Not because I needed you, but because I got used to being wanted by you. There’s a difference, and I hate admitting that I only understood it after losing it.
Then I saw you with her.
There was no dramatic build-up, no warning that prepared me for it. It was just a normal moment that turned into something I couldn’t unsee. You looked… okay. More than okay, actually. You looked like someone who wasn’t waiting anymore. You looked like someone who had moved on in a way that didn’t involve me at all.
And that’s where everything I thought I would feel completely failed me.
I wasn’t angry. I didn’t feel the kind of jealousy that makes you want to ruin things. I didn’t feel like confronting you or asking questions I already knew the answers to. I just stood there, noticing small details I wish I hadn’t paid attention to, like how natural it looked, how easy it seemed for you to be there with her, how you smiled in a way I used to look for when it was just us.
That’s when it hit me, and not in a dramatic or cinematic way, but in a quiet, almost embarrassing realization that I had been wrong about myself this whole time.
I wasn’t the person who would burn anything down.
I was the person who let something real pass because I was too busy calculating the risks instead of admitting that I actually cared.
And now that it’s gone, I don’t even have the right to be upset about it in the way I imagined I would.
Because what exactly am I mad at?
You didn’t betray me. You didn’t leave me for someone else. You didn’t choose her over me, because I never gave you the option to choose me in the first place. I was the one who said no. I was the one who decided that “maybe” was safer than “yes.” I was the one who assumed you would always be there long enough for me to figure it out later.
There is no later.
That’s the part I didn’t prepare for.
I thought I had time. I thought feelings like yours would wait for feelings like mine to catch up. But they didn’t. And honestly, they shouldn’t have.
So no, I didn’t burn the city down when I saw you with someone else. I didn’t even come close. I didn’t say anything, didn’t interrupt, didn’t walk away dramatically. I just stood there long enough to understand something I should have admitted to myself a long time ago.
I liked you. I just didn’t choose you.
And now you’ve chosen someone else.
It’s that simple, and somehow that makes it harder to deal with.
Because there’s no one to blame. Not you, not her, not the situation. Just me and my own decisions that felt right at the time and feel a lot heavier now.
What makes it worse is that I still catch myself waiting, like there’s a version of this story where you come back and everything lines up at the right time. But that’s not how this works, and deep down I know that. Waiting doesn’t fix bad timing. It just keeps me stuck in it.
You moved forward. I stayed behind, trying to make sense of something that was already clear.
And maybe this is the most honest I can be about it. I didn’t lose you. I let you go when I had you in front of me, and now I’m dealing with the version of you that no longer belongs in my life the way you used to.
So when I think about all the things I said before, about how I would react, about how intense it would be, it all feels a little ridiculous now.
Because when it actually happened, when it was real and right in front of me, I didn’t burn anything down.
I couldn’t even light a match.
