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Loving you is like standing Outside a house at dusk, Watching lights flicker In windows that never fully open. Sometimes you look at me Like you are almost home. Like there is a language inside you Trying to become real. But then you turn away, Confused by your own silence. I think the hardest thing About loving someone uncertain Is that they give you fragments Without meaning to. A softer voice. A longer stare. Hands that linger half a second too long. Tiny mercies That grow into unbearable hope. You hold my heart Like someone holding a letter Written in a language they cannot read. You know it matters. You just do not know what it says. And I cannot blame you for that. Maybe some people are taught To fear the depth of their own feelings. Maybe love arrived in your chest So quietly You mistook it for friendship. Maybe you are still searching yourself For the courage to name what is there. So I stay here— Not waiting, But becoming familiar With the ache of unfinished things. Because loving you has taught me That uncertainty is its own kind of grief. Not the grief of losing someone, But the grief of standing close enough To touch what could become love And never knowing If it will choose to exist.
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May 13
May 13, 2026 at 9:19 PM UTC
A House With Unlit Rooms
Loving you is like standing Outside a house at dusk, Watching lights flicker In windows that never fully open. Sometimes you look at me Like you are almost home. Like there is a language inside you Trying to become real. But then you turn away, Confused by your own silence. I think the hardest thing About loving someone uncertain Is that they give you fragments Without meaning to. A softer voice. A longer stare. Hands that linger half a second too long. Tiny mercies That grow into unbearable hope. You hold my heart Like someone holding a letter Written in a language they cannot read. You know it matters. You just do not know what it says. And I cannot blame you for that. Maybe some people are taught To fear the depth of their own feelings. Maybe love arrived in your chest So quietly You mistook it for friendship. Maybe you are still searching yourself For the courage to name what is there. So I stay here— Not waiting, But becoming familiar With the ache of unfinished things. Because loving you has taught me That uncertainty is its own kind of grief. Not the grief of losing someone, But the grief of standing close enough To touch what could become love And never knowing If it will choose to exist.
Athena_c6
Written by
May 13
May 13, 2026 at 9:19 PM UTC
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