About the person I will never know

Hey! Or maybe I should just say hi, hi like the first time we spoke.

I will never deny that I have and will always be a hopeless romantic. I picture music, passion, and fairytales when I think of love. Unfortunately, or maybe fortunately, I am unable to let go of this despite all the ways that I have witnessed the opposite.

Around the time before I saw you, I had had enough. I had just found a way to pick myself back up after I had once again been shown what it felt like to chase someone who did not choose me and who didn’t see me. I was experiencing what felt like another flop moment, and at that point, I had honestly had enough. I committed myself to my books and only looked up at my friends and work.

I was fine. Things weren’t perfect, but I was fine.

Then I saw you.

Truthfully, I feel silly writing this. It almost feels embarrassing to admit the effect that one look had on me. I knew nothing about you, but I wanted to know everything.

Suddenly, our one-second eye contact-ship became the highlight of my days. I found myself cemented in places where I knew there was a possibility of seeing you. I once walked with my head down, but now it was high.

It was kind of all-consuming, leading me to believe it would disappear as quickly and sharply as it had come to me. So, I sat patiently and waited for the feelings to pass.

They did not.

Social media. A dangerous tool but a tool nonetheless. I asked for access to your world, and you accepted. And finally, it happened.

“Hi”

It is laughable how happy that interaction left me. How I thought about it for days. I can not deny it; speaking to you made me happy.

Anytime after that, I would be grateful for a moment, any moment that I could get to speak to you. Regardless of the duration, content, or reason. Time and place – I was there. I even wondered if I had ever liked anyone because no one had ever made me feel like this.

I created a space where you could comfortably occupy my thoughts. A space of stillness in my busy mind.

The truth is that I was scared; I am still scared. I had seen the worse sides of the game of love, and I wondered if my heart was truly capable of dealing with disappointment again. My cowardly self was too scared to explore because I feared that reality would shatter the last person to make me excited about the possibility of ever finding a lover.

In my defense, I always told myself that I would say this to you. I promised myself that the next time I saw you, I would take courage, embrace it, and speak my truth. Funny, after I made this promise, I never saw you again.

So here I am, writing a declaration—words I have always wanted to say but have been too scared to admit.

I think you are beautiful. It is true. I have never seen someone look so good; honestly, it is mind-boggling. Every time I saw you, my chest would tighten, and my breathing would become a manual action I needed to consciously partake in. Contrastingly, I always felt a calmness and safety that would result in me wanting to tell you everything and also wishing to know everything.

That is another thing. I wanted to know everything. I wanted to hear everything about you. I wanted to know what made you happy, sad, angry. I wanted to know what made you, you.

Now, I hope I don’t come off as crazy. I want you to know that I worked extra hard at not imagining who you could be. I wanted to genuinely know you. I hope this does not scare you. I hope it does not make you want to deter me. It is unlikely that our paths will ever cross again. I wanted to thank you because I never knew what it felt like to really crush on someone, to be undeniably attracted to someone.

To the stranger who consumed my life for a moment in time, I genuinely wish you all the best. I hope you know that you have a silent fan cheering you on as you do whatever you have always wanted to do.

I also release you. I release you because I realize I deserve to find someone who thinks of me this way.

Because I can love like this means that I deserve a love like that.

On starting again

Back again!

It only took me four years, lol.

I recently graduated from university. I did the thing, I put in the work, and sure enough, I walked across a stage and got my (very much deserved) 5 minutes of fame. And while I am incredibly proud and grateful that I was able to achieve such an achievement, the end of my undergrad journey was filled with the underlying feeling of unfulfillment, confusion, and frustration.

This trifecta of bad vibes was because what I had imagined I would feel at the end of this journey versus my reality was completely different. I had envisioned myself being more grounded and secure, energized for the next chapter. Instead, I had a liberal arts degree and zero clue about where and how to begin the next step. One thing I did know was that I was exhausted and burnt out to a crisp.

In conclusion, I felt deceived. I did the work! There were countless sleepless nights, overconsumption and reliance on coffee, emails … oh, all the emails begging class instructors for extensions, clarifications, and mercy. I happily found myself on my knees because I was motivated because this was necessary. It was a degrading means to a prideful end.

Yet here I was, confused as ever my only companion being the burning question: What is next?

Now, this was three months ago. I have since spent all my available energy on relaxing and regrouping. No one ever said how difficult it is to relax, you know. I have had to force myself to be okay with not having plans, reminding myself that the difference between me and the bummy men that my friends and I make fun of is that I am me, and they are them. Simple. This period of rest was not only so so deserved but also a moment in which I allowed myself to really just think. Think about what I wanted and where I wanted to be.

This was the beginning of me opening my Pandora’s box (I hope I am using that term correctly).

It’s shocking, really, how when you decide to dedicate time to pursuing your hobbies and finding your purpose, that is when you discover that you really have zero idea who you are.

In these past few months, I have learned so much about myself. Not even in a deep, Oprah Winfrey crying type of way, but in an interesting non-psychoanalytical way! It’s been fun! But I will say that before it was fun, it was lonely and depressing.

It did take me being so stressed out that both my eyes would twitch uncontrollably, a serious lack of emotional regulation, and almost breaking down because I missed a bus to get here. After I had a sit-down moment with myself and realized all this was doing more harm than good, I decided to take the time and just … be.

On starting again.

I wish I could say life has been just dandy since I made this choice, however we live in a society, and life will do what life does. But it has become more bearable and dare I say it – enjoyable?

I came to the conclusion that in order for me to begin this journey of the what is next, I needed to accept my current reality. The truth was that I did not know. I knew what I did not want, but ultimately I did not know anything else. I was starting from scratch and I that meant I needed to be okay with that. I needed to be okay with that because I needed to be okay with all that comes with starting again.

The vulnerability of learning. Of not knowing. Being taught, making mistakes, and trying again.

Starting again.

And so I am here. Back again! I learned that in all the moments that I have been through in life, one thing has always stayed the same, I am a writer. I love it. My mind and body exist to write and tell stories. I am more comfortable with a pen, but I could get used to typing. So here we are, with a self-promise to remain consistent. Granting myself a space to express and grow. Enjoy the ride