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Panic hits different when you’re not alone. It doesn’t wait for a dark bedroom or locked bathroom door. It comes fluorescent and public- in a hallway after class, under humming lights, with your teacher asking gentle questions about twenty-seven absences like they’re attendance marks and not survival. “Were you sick?” “Are you okay now?” “Do you have a lot of makeup tests?” Her voice was careful. Mine was disappearing. The room tilted. My chest cinched tight like a fist had learned my name. Air turned thin, mean. My hands trembled like they were trying to leave me. “I don’t feel well. I need to sit down.” And before I shattered completely, she saw it- the spiral, the silent scream. She knelt beside me like the floor was holy ground. Her hand on my knee- steady. Warm. Real. “In for three. Hold for three. Out for three.” Breath by borrowed breath she counted me back into my own body. I was shaking so hard I thought I might dissolve, but she stayed. Didn’t flinch. Didn’t rush. Another teacher came- she explained for me when my voice couldn’t. Pulled me from her class like I was something worth protecting. Water in my hands. An hour of questions. Family. Habits. Hobbies. Life. Everything- as if stitching my name back into the world. Not to pry. Not to grade. But to anchor. To make this life feel livable again. To make me feel safe. She says I’m not safe if I think about death. If I hurt myself. The worst part is- she’s right. And it breaks something in me that someone else can see the danger I’ve been pretending isn’t there.
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Feb 21
Feb 21, 2026 at 10:28 AM UTC
Breathing me back
Panic hits different when you’re not alone. It doesn’t wait for a dark bedroom or locked bathroom door. It comes fluorescent and public- in a hallway after class, under humming lights, with your teacher asking gentle questions about twenty-seven absences like they’re attendance marks and not survival. “Were you sick?” “Are you okay now?” “Do you have a lot of makeup tests?” Her voice was careful. Mine was disappearing. The room tilted. My chest cinched tight like a fist had learned my name. Air turned thin, mean. My hands trembled like they were trying to leave me. “I don’t feel well. I need to sit down.” And before I shattered completely, she saw it- the spiral, the silent scream. She knelt beside me like the floor was holy ground. Her hand on my knee- steady. Warm. Real. “In for three. Hold for three. Out for three.” Breath by borrowed breath she counted me back into my own body. I was shaking so hard I thought I might dissolve, but she stayed. Didn’t flinch. Didn’t rush. Another teacher came- she explained for me when my voice couldn’t. Pulled me from her class like I was something worth protecting. Water in my hands. An hour of questions. Family. Habits. Hobbies. Life. Everything- as if stitching my name back into the world. Not to pry. Not to grade. But to anchor. To make this life feel livable again. To make me feel safe. She says I’m not safe if I think about death. If I hurt myself. The worst part is- she’s right. And it breaks something in me that someone else can see the danger I’ve been pretending isn’t there.
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Feb 21
Feb 21, 2026 at 10:28 AM UTC
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