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wheremysilencespeaks
20/F
If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d move to Norway. I’d wake to mountains wrapped in mist, walk beside fjords that mirrored the sky, and learn that silence is not an enemy but a companion.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d not only see the world— I’d learn it. I’d taste spices in Morocco, learn dances in Brazil, drink red wine in Spain, walk beneath the cherry blossoms in Japan, stand in Iceland under skies that catch fire, trace the ruins of Greece with my fingertips, watch the sun rise over deserts in Morocco. I’d wander through India’s colors, breathe the sharp air of the Andes, and sit quietly in the forests of Finland until stillness felt like home.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d dive into the Great Barrier Reef, swim among colors brighter than anything I’ve written. I’d climb mountains in Switzerland and let my lungs burn with clean air. I’d follow the rivers of Canada, camp beneath skies so heavy with stars they would drown out my doubts. I’d stumble through words in languages not my own and laugh at the mistakes. I’d fill my passport with stamps and my heart with places that felt like home for a day, a week, or a lifetime.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d tell people how I feel. I’d say I miss you without shame, I need you without fear, I love you without hesitation. I would trust that they could hold both the light and the storm of me. I would risk being known.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d create without fear. I’d paint without erasing, write without deleting, sing without lowering my voice. I would publish my poems and trust they might land in someone else’s quiet night like a lantern they didn’t know they needed.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I would adopt a cat. I’d let it curl against me in the evenings, purring its small, steady rhythm into the noise of my thoughts. I’d adopt a dog too, let its joy drag me outside, pulling me toward sunlight and weather, reminding me that life is meant to be walked through.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d dance in the rain, sing off-key in the shower, fill notebooks without editing, and dance badly but freely. I’d stop waiting for the perfect moment, and instead let imperfect moments become my life.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I would let myself dream of futures. Not just days or weeks, but years. I’d imagine birthdays not yet celebrated, friendships not yet found, a life that stretches forward instead of folding in.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I would know what it feels like to be free. Free from the weight of fear, free from the urge to vanish, free to step into the world without asking permission. I’d gather freedom piece by piece— in laughter, in rain, in mountains, in love— until it was mine to carry.   And maybe— just maybe— I’d stop circling the question of leaving, and start writing a list of places to go, people to hold, stories to tell, reasons to stay.
0
Sep 7, 2025
Sep 7, 2025 at 5:39 PM UTC
If I Weren’t Afraid to Live
If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d move to Norway. I’d wake to mountains wrapped in mist, walk beside fjords that mirrored the sky, and learn that silence is not an enemy but a companion.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d not only see the world— I’d learn it. I’d taste spices in Morocco, learn dances in Brazil, drink red wine in Spain, walk beneath the cherry blossoms in Japan, stand in Iceland under skies that catch fire, trace the ruins of Greece with my fingertips, watch the sun rise over deserts in Morocco. I’d wander through India’s colors, breathe the sharp air of the Andes, and sit quietly in the forests of Finland until stillness felt like home.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d dive into the Great Barrier Reef, swim among colors brighter than anything I’ve written. I’d climb mountains in Switzerland and let my lungs burn with clean air. I’d follow the rivers of Canada, camp beneath skies so heavy with stars they would drown out my doubts. I’d stumble through words in languages not my own and laugh at the mistakes. I’d fill my passport with stamps and my heart with places that felt like home for a day, a week, or a lifetime.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d tell people how I feel. I’d say I miss you without shame, I need you without fear, I love you without hesitation. I would trust that they could hold both the light and the storm of me. I would risk being known.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d create without fear. I’d paint without erasing, write without deleting, sing without lowering my voice. I would publish my poems and trust they might land in someone else’s quiet night like a lantern they didn’t know they needed.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I would adopt a cat. I’d let it curl against me in the evenings, purring its small, steady rhythm into the noise of my thoughts. I’d adopt a dog too, let its joy drag me outside, pulling me toward sunlight and weather, reminding me that life is meant to be walked through.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I’d dance in the rain, sing off-key in the shower, fill notebooks without editing, and dance badly but freely. I’d stop waiting for the perfect moment, and instead let imperfect moments become my life.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I would let myself dream of futures. Not just days or weeks, but years. I’d imagine birthdays not yet celebrated, friendships not yet found, a life that stretches forward instead of folding in.   If I weren’t afraid to live, I would know what it feels like to be free. Free from the weight of fear, free from the urge to vanish, free to step into the world without asking permission. I’d gather freedom piece by piece— in laughter, in rain, in mountains, in love— until it was mine to carry.   And maybe— just maybe— I’d stop circling the question of leaving, and start writing a list of places to go, people to hold, stories to tell, reasons to stay.
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91
They say the fear kicks in halfway down. The breath you didn’t think you wanted comes clawing up your throat, the ground becomes too real, and life— suddenly, violently— feels too short to leave behind. They say that’s when it hits you. That bolt of regret. That desperate gasp. That scream your mind makes when your body is already committed. But what if mine never comes? What if I’ve stood on this ledge so long the fall feels like flying? What if I’ve rehearsed the silence so often that even the rush of air couldn’t pull a heartbeat from this chest? They say halfway down is a revelation— but my eyes stay shut. My fists stay unclenched. My lungs stay quiet. I watch that horse fall again and again— a warning dressed as poetry. That moment where everything becomes too real, too late. And I wish it scared me. But it doesn’t. Because I don’t believe I’d feel that panic. I don’t believe my hands would reach back. I don’t believe regret would bloom like they say. Because I’ve already fallen— so many times, without ever leaving the ground. And maybe that’s worse. To still be standing and already halfway gone. To look at life through the lens of a last moment and feel nothing. Because if there’s a view from halfway down, I’ve been staring at it for years— and it never blinked. And neither did I—
0
Jul 8, 2025
Jul 8, 2025 at 10:50 AM UTC
The Moment I Don’t Believe In
Alien. That’s all it takes. Say it enough times— with enough pride, with enough certainty, say it like it’s harmless— and you start to believe it. You convince yourself some people don’t belong here. That some lives weigh less. That some suffering is acceptable. And soon, you forget they were ever people to begin with. This is where it begins. Not with camps. Not with walls. With words— small, familiar, deadly. Words that divide. Words that erase. Words that strip humanity away layer by layer, until you look at a person and only see a problem. And what happens next? We dress it up. We call it safety. We call it policy. We call it normal. But let’s not pretend. Alligator Alcatraz is not a policy. It’s not a technicality. It’s not safety. It’s a concentration camp. Built by people who learned nothing from the blood their ancestors drowned in. And I am from Germany. I know this pattern. I know how fast words become walls. How quickly division becomes destruction. How easily neighbors become strangers, become threats, become numbers. We screamed it into history books— Never again. We tattooed it across generations. We carved it into memorials. We taught it in classrooms. We promised. But promises mean nothing if we look away now. It never starts with gas chambers. It starts with small lines— borders, walls, categories. It starts with us and them. When fear speaks louder. When division feels safer than empathy. When language poisons the foundation before anyone notices. It starts when people feel so distant, so different, that hurting them feels justified. And I’ll say it plainly— You cannot be neutral while this happens. You either fight— or you help them build the fences. Because it always ends the same way— with camps, with cages, with bodies counted in hindsight, and the world pretending no one saw it coming. But we do see it coming. We see it now. And if we refuse to speak, if we refuse to fight— history isn’t repeating itself. We are repeating it.
0
Jul 4, 2025
Jul 4, 2025 at 7:50 PM UTC
Alien
Alien. That’s all it takes. Say it enough times— with enough pride, with enough certainty, say it like it’s harmless— and you start to believe it. You convince yourself some people don’t belong here. That some lives weigh less. That some suffering is acceptable. And soon, you forget they were ever people to begin with. This is where it begins. Not with camps. Not with walls. With words— small, familiar, deadly. Words that divide. Words that erase. Words that strip humanity away layer by layer, until you look at a person and only see a problem. And what happens next? We dress it up. We call it safety. We call it policy. We call it normal. But let’s not pretend. Alligator Alcatraz is not a policy. It’s not a technicality. It’s not safety. It’s a concentration camp. Built by people who learned nothing from the blood their ancestors drowned in. And I am from Germany. I know this pattern. I know how fast words become walls. How quickly division becomes destruction. How easily neighbors become strangers, become threats, become numbers. We screamed it into history books— Never again. We tattooed it across generations. We carved it into memorials. We taught it in classrooms. We promised. But promises mean nothing if we look away now. It never starts with gas chambers. It starts with small lines— borders, walls, categories. It starts with us and them. When fear speaks louder. When division feels safer than empathy. When language poisons the foundation before anyone notices. It starts when people feel so distant, so different, that hurting them feels justified. And I’ll say it plainly— You cannot be neutral while this happens. You either fight— or you help them build the fences. Because it always ends the same way— with camps, with cages, with bodies counted in hindsight, and the world pretending no one saw it coming. But we do see it coming. We see it now. And if we refuse to speak, if we refuse to fight— history isn’t repeating itself. We are repeating it.
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81
When I was little, I thought I’d grow up and become someone that glittered. Not famous. Not rich. Just soft. Just full of light. Someone who laughed without flinching and felt safe in her own skin. Someone who saved the day and got to sleep through the night. I thought growing up meant choosing your favorite ice cream at midnight, meant late-night dances in the kitchen, meant freedom with a ribbon tied around it. I didn’t know it meant silence in hospital beds and scars you don’t show. I didn’t know that being alive would ever feel so close to being lost. I didn’t imagine this. When I was nine, I made wishes on stars. I believed in fairy godmothers, second chances, and that every sad ending was just a chapter before the miracle. But my miracle must’ve gotten stuck somewhere between foster care statistics and the wrong people with the wrong intentions, between school hallways and rooms where no one listened until I screamed. I didn’t think growing up meant learning how to be quiet enough to stay safe. Didn’t think it meant counting calories and skipped meals and mistakes you can’t scrub off. Didn’t think it would be this hard to get out of bed on a Tuesday. No one told me that sometimes the monsters win. And they don’t have fangs or claws— just names and job titles and the ability to be believed. The girl I used to be wouldn’t recognize me now. She’d ask why I stopped painting, why I’m always tired, why I never dance in the kitchen anymore. She’d ask what happened to magic. And I wouldn’t know how to answer. Because I don’t want to tell her that sometimes the world breaks you before you have the words to explain the damage. That sometimes you survive things so dark you can’t ever go back to who you were before. And I don’t want to see her face when I say that dreams don’t come true just because you want them to. That no matter how bright your heart is, there are places so cold even hope shivers. But still— I hope she never stops wishing. Because I don’t know who I’d be if I didn’t remember how she used to believe. And sometimes, on quiet nights, I still look up at the same stars and wonder if maybe she’s still in there somewhere. If maybe there’s still time to become someone she’d be proud of.
0
Jun 6, 2025
Jun 6, 2025 at 3:43 PM UTC
This wasn’t the Plan
When I was little, I thought I’d grow up and become someone that glittered. Not famous. Not rich. Just soft. Just full of light. Someone who laughed without flinching and felt safe in her own skin. Someone who saved the day and got to sleep through the night. I thought growing up meant choosing your favorite ice cream at midnight, meant late-night dances in the kitchen, meant freedom with a ribbon tied around it. I didn’t know it meant silence in hospital beds and scars you don’t show. I didn’t know that being alive would ever feel so close to being lost. I didn’t imagine this. When I was nine, I made wishes on stars. I believed in fairy godmothers, second chances, and that every sad ending was just a chapter before the miracle. But my miracle must’ve gotten stuck somewhere between foster care statistics and the wrong people with the wrong intentions, between school hallways and rooms where no one listened until I screamed. I didn’t think growing up meant learning how to be quiet enough to stay safe. Didn’t think it meant counting calories and skipped meals and mistakes you can’t scrub off. Didn’t think it would be this hard to get out of bed on a Tuesday. No one told me that sometimes the monsters win. And they don’t have fangs or claws— just names and job titles and the ability to be believed. The girl I used to be wouldn’t recognize me now. She’d ask why I stopped painting, why I’m always tired, why I never dance in the kitchen anymore. She’d ask what happened to magic. And I wouldn’t know how to answer. Because I don’t want to tell her that sometimes the world breaks you before you have the words to explain the damage. That sometimes you survive things so dark you can’t ever go back to who you were before. And I don’t want to see her face when I say that dreams don’t come true just because you want them to. That no matter how bright your heart is, there are places so cold even hope shivers. But still— I hope she never stops wishing. Because I don’t know who I’d be if I didn’t remember how she used to believe. And sometimes, on quiet nights, I still look up at the same stars and wonder if maybe she’s still in there somewhere. If maybe there’s still time to become someone she’d be proud of.
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99
My little sister called me tonight. Her voice cracked before she even said hello. She saw the heart I typed, and thought I was saying goodbye. She shouldn’t have to live like this— bracing herself every time I answer too slowly, learning to read my silences like warning signs. She’s just a kid. My baby. The one I used to tuck in and promise monsters weren’t real. But now I am the monster. Not to her. Never to her. But to myself. I am the nightmare she can’t wake up from. The danger she can’t punch away. The reason she checks her phone like it’s a lifeline and a bomb at the same time. And I hate it. I hate that she’s learning to live on edge because of me. Because I might break and take her with me. So maybe— maybe the kindest thing I could do is just end it. Once. Not again and again in panicked calls and whispered fears and “I love you”s that sound too final. Not in sirens or hospital beds or birthdays where I couldn’t come. Just once. One clean tear through the timeline. One scream. One silence. And then nothing. She’d cry, yes. But she’d stop being afraid. She wouldn’t have to wonder anymore. Wouldn’t have to scan my messages for signs of collapse. Wouldn’t have to carry this slow, rotting dread that her sister might be dying in a place she can’t reach. Maybe grief would be easier than fear. Maybe heartbreak would feel like freedom after years of holding her breath. I think about that a lot. How maybe the kindest thing I could ever do for her is disappear.
0
May 31, 2025
May 31, 2025 at 4:32 PM UTC
The Kindest Thing
My little sister called me tonight. Her voice cracked before she even said hello. She saw the heart I typed, and thought I was saying goodbye. She shouldn’t have to live like this— bracing herself every time I answer too slowly, learning to read my silences like warning signs. She’s just a kid. My baby. The one I used to tuck in and promise monsters weren’t real. But now I am the monster. Not to her. Never to her. But to myself. I am the nightmare she can’t wake up from. The danger she can’t punch away. The reason she checks her phone like it’s a lifeline and a bomb at the same time. And I hate it. I hate that she’s learning to live on edge because of me. Because I might break and take her with me. So maybe— maybe the kindest thing I could do is just end it. Once. Not again and again in panicked calls and whispered fears and “I love you”s that sound too final. Not in sirens or hospital beds or birthdays where I couldn’t come. Just once. One clean tear through the timeline. One scream. One silence. And then nothing. She’d cry, yes. But she’d stop being afraid. She wouldn’t have to wonder anymore. Wouldn’t have to scan my messages for signs of collapse. Wouldn’t have to carry this slow, rotting dread that her sister might be dying in a place she can’t reach. Maybe grief would be easier than fear. Maybe heartbreak would feel like freedom after years of holding her breath. I think about that a lot. How maybe the kindest thing I could ever do for her is disappear.
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62
What is grief,   if not love   wandering in search of a home? It lingers in hollow spaces,   quiet corners of empty rooms,   whispering to walls   that no longer echo back. Grief is love without a pulse—   a heartbeat still waiting for an answer,   a name spoken into silence,   hoping for an echo   that will never come. But still,   I need it to become something.   To sprout wings   or take root in the soil—   to turn into something I can hold:   a garden,   a letter,   a breath.   Something to name the weight. Grief is love unbound—   it spills,   it seeps,   it finds the cracks in days and nights,   asking, always asking:   Where now? And yet—   grief moves.   It carries yesterday’s tenderness   into tomorrow’s hands,   grows roots in memory,   builds altars from the ache,   finds its place   in every sunrise,   every tear   that softens the ground. Grief is love   that will not rest,   will not relent. But one day, I believe—   it will bloom.
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May 30, 2025
May 30, 2025 at 12:43 PM UTC
Grief, the wandering Love