It wasn’t the headline that mattered; it was the air around it.
A simple story about a pipeline, background noise for a quiet breakfast.
But then there was that grin
too knowing, too layered for something so trivial.
It wasn’t cruel. It wasn’t kind. It was personal in a way that made no sense.
If it had been condescending, I could have brushed it off.
If it had been serious, I could have named it.
But it lived in the space between
the kind of moment you file away for later, unsure why it hums under your skin.
I didn’t need to understand the politics, because the message wasn’t political.
It was quieter, more instinctive
the kind of thing you feel in your chest before you name it.
If I were psychic, I would’ve called it exactly as it was: be cautious, people are watching.
And maybe that was the point all along not fear, but awareness.
The sense that something about me had crossed from private into public space, and I couldn’t unfeel it.
From then on, I watched the world a little differently. Not suspicious, just awake.
Looking back, I don’t think it was ever about politics.
If it were, the energy would have been different
sharper, simpler, easier to name.
Instead, it was layered, personal without context.
He seemed to know something about me that I didn’t know, and that imbalance carried its own kind of gravity.
It wasn’t about right or left, opinion or belief.
It was about knowing and being known and learning, too late, that the two will never feel the same.
Maybe, in the end, it wasn’t warning at all.
Maybe it was care, trapped in silence
the body’s way of saying what words couldn’t:
Take care of yourself; I wish I could say more.
Nov 12, 2025
Nov 12, 2025 at 11:30 PM UTC
It wasn’t the headline that mattered; it was the air around it.
A simple story about a pipeline, background noise for a quiet breakfast.
But then there was that grin
too knowing, too layered for something so trivial.
It wasn’t cruel. It wasn’t kind. It was personal in a way that made no sense.
If it had been condescending, I could have brushed it off.
If it had been serious, I could have named it.
But it lived in the space between
the kind of moment you file away for later, unsure why it hums under your skin.
I didn’t need to understand the politics, because the message wasn’t political.
It was quieter, more instinctive
the kind of thing you feel in your chest before you name it.
If I were psychic, I would’ve called it exactly as it was: be cautious, people are watching.
And maybe that was the point all along not fear, but awareness.
The sense that something about me had crossed from private into public space, and I couldn’t unfeel it.
From then on, I watched the world a little differently. Not suspicious, just awake.
Looking back, I don’t think it was ever about politics.
If it were, the energy would have been different
sharper, simpler, easier to name.
Instead, it was layered, personal without context.
He seemed to know something about me that I didn’t know, and that imbalance carried its own kind of gravity.
It wasn’t about right or left, opinion or belief.
It was about knowing and being known and learning, too late, that the two will never feel the same.
Maybe, in the end, it wasn’t warning at all.
Maybe it was care, trapped in silence
the body’s way of saying what words couldn’t:
Take care of yourself; I wish I could say more.