Some people lose you and call it your fault. Others are afraid to lose you — and that’s the difference.
I am loved by someone who is afraid to lose me.
It still feels strange to say that out loud — like something I always had, but somehow forgot along the way.
Because the truth is, I was never unfamiliar with love. I grew up being loved the right way. Not excessively spoiled, not neglected either. I was simply… chosen. Naturally. Effortlessly. I never had to fight to be loved, or question whether I deserved it.
Until one day, I did.
A past relationship left me questioning everything I thought I knew about love, about myself, about the world I lived in. It didn’t just end — it collapsed. Messy, confusing, and unfair in ways I didn’t think I would ever have to experience. There were accusations, denials, and narratives that weren’t mine, yet somehow placed on me.
I learned something important from that:
sometimes people don’t face the truth — not because it isn’t there, but because it’s too uncomfortable to admit.
And I realized I didn’t want to be part of that cycle.
Not the blaming, not the chaos, not the need to prove anything.
So I let it go.
Not because it didn’t matter — but because I chose peace over noise.
For a moment, though, that experience made me forget something essential:
that I had always been loved in a good and honest way.
It made me question a version of myself that, in truth, never needed questioning.
But healing has a quiet way of bringing you back to yourself.
I chose to move on the right way — even when it was hard.
To sit with the pain, to understand it, to learn from it.
And slowly, things became lighter. Clearer. Safer.
And then, I met him.
Someone who didn’t make me question my worth.
Someone who didn’t make love feel like a competition or confusion.
Someone who simply… made sense.
I am loved by someone who listens to my stories and makes sure our communication is clear.
I am loved by someone who understands boundaries without making me feel pushed away.
I am loved by someone who feels safe — and makes me feel safe too.
With him, I don’t feel the need to shrink or change who I am.
And somehow, I’ve become even more myself.
I used to wonder why he felt so lucky to have me.
Now, I’m starting to understand.
Not out of arrogance — but out of clarity.
I have always had something within me that is sincere, steady, and real.
And maybe, it makes sense that one day, it would meet someone just as sincere, just as steady, just as real.
We don’t complete each other — we meet each other fully.
He once told me that with me, he feels like he can finally love safely.
And maybe that’s what this is.
Not a perfect love.
But a grounded one.
A conscious one.
A love that chooses, every day.
I know nothing is ever fully certain.
People change. Life shifts. The future remains a mystery.
But right now — this moment — is real.
And I choose to be here.
To be grateful.
To trust the version of myself I’ve built.
Because no matter what happens next, I know this much:
I am loved.
And I am no longer afraid to believe it.