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#strengthwithin
Life kicked me, even when I was already down. It left me so many times, alone, thinking no one cared. I had so much love to give, but I wasn’t the most beautiful for those who sought it. They mocked me for being strange, when they were the ones who didn’t understand. I trusted those who swore to stay, yet behind my back, they laughed. I lost myself, becoming what others wanted me to be. I loved who I shouldn’t have, trusted who I couldn’t, fought battles that weren’t mine. Tired of the shadows, I became light. Until I learned to play, to laugh, and to love. What did I learn?
0
Mar 4, 2025
Mar 4, 2025 at 5:16 AM UTC
Indomitable
I have friends. That’s what I tell myself when I sit with them, _pretending to belong._ But they don’t see me. Not really. To them, I’m the quiet one, The innocent one, The dumb one. The child playing at adulthood, Too naive to understand the world they walk. They think I don’t notice how they talk down to me, The way they smile when I speak of my dreams. Like I’m too soft to notice the sharpness of their words. But I am not a child, And I am not innocent. I am a girl who learned How to smile through the ache, How to laugh through the hollow, How to pretend that I don’t feel the walls closing in. They think I’m easy to fool, That I won’t catch the way they roll their eyes When I speak of the things I love. The toys that make me smile, The lines of  books that cling to my soul, The songs I bury myself in & the piano and violin melodies that feel like home in a world too loud. All dismissed, waved off, ridiculed, Labeled childish, unworthy of their time. Like my joy is an inconvenience to their lives. But I notice. I notice everything. I notice how they’ve built me in their minds— A fragile thing, easy to break, easy to ignore. They have no idea what it’s like to be me. They don’t know how my hands shake When I hold back tears in front of them. They don’t know how many words I swallow Just to keep the peace, How many pieces of myself I’ve hidden To make them more comfortable. They laugh _at me._ _Not with me._ They think I don’t see it, That I don’t feel it— The subtle cruelty hidden in their jokes, The way they twist my softness into stupidity. I am but a pitiful inclusion of their conversations. A mere placeholder in their group. A shadow they barely notice Until they need to feel smarter, stronger, better. And I let them. Because it’s easier to stay quiet, To let them believe they’re right, Than to fight against the weight of their indifference. In the end, I shrink. I fold myself into something smaller, Something quieter, Until I am nothing more than the version they created— A shadow of myself, Easy to laugh at, easy to control. But inside, I’m screaming. Inside, I’m crying. Because I don’t know how to explain What it feels like to be surrounded And still feel like the loneliest person in the room. They think they know me. But how could they? They’ve never looked past the smile I force, Never wondered why my hands tremble, Why my breath falters, Why my voice sometimes dies in my throat. I am surrounded by people, But I am alone in a way _I can’t explain._ Alone in the crowd, Alone in their presence, Alone in the silence I hide behind. I sit there, smiling, nodding, surrounded by their voices, Their laughter, their noise. And yet I am alone. Because they will never understand the weight I carry, the weight of a heart that beats in isolation. I pretend like I don’t care When they say I’m childish, That my love for vanilla makes me small. But inside, I am clawing at my own skin, Begging for someone to see me— Not the version of me they created, But the real me. Everyone likes vanilla. I like it a bit more. But they don’t get it, do they? How something so simple can mean everything when you feel so ******* lost. They mock me for it— Like it’s some childish obsession, Like it’s a flaw that I’m drawn to the soft, The pure, The things that make me feel whole In a world that’s always trying to tear me apart. They look at my quiet smile, my careful hands, And slap a label on my skin: innocent. Like I’m some sticker they can peel off, Stick wherever they please and forget. But I am not what they think I am. I am not a word whispered behind cupped hands, Not the soft thing they’ve mistaken for weak I love stickers. Bright, bold, beautiful things That I press into notebooks and corners of my world, Little pieces of colour in the chaos I can’t control. But I am not a sticker. I am not something they can pin down, Label me whatever they ******* want to. I am what I am, It is what it is, so deal with it or leave. If the consequence of me being me is loneliness, _then so be it._ I am many things, But I am not their innocent doll. I am not a joke, I am not their fool. I am not just a sticker. I am not just their label. I am a mosaic of cracks and scars, and one day, I will tear these labels from my skin and show them the strength they never saw. Who knows, maybe they might finally realise, why hurricanes are named after people. Too bad they’ll never take the time to know that. They’re too busy talking over me, too busy writing their own stories on the pages of my silence. I don’t need their pity. I don’t need their approval. But God, sometimes I wish just one of them would stop and look at me long enough to see the storm I carry, to hear the screams I choke back every day. Because I am tired of being invisible. Tired of being their afterthought. Tired of being underestimated, of being seen but never known. I am tired of sitting among friends and still feeling utterly, completely, Alone. And I inevitably find myself wondering — Will anyone ever know this loneliness? Will anyone ever stop long enough to see the girl who hides behind this smile? Or am I doomed to disappear, lost in a crowd that never bothered to look closer?
0
Jan 27, 2025
Jan 27, 2025 at 3:14 AM UTC
Not just a sticker.
I have friends. That’s what I tell myself when I sit with them, _pretending to belong._ But they don’t see me. Not really. To them, I’m the quiet one, The innocent one, The dumb one. The child playing at adulthood, Too naive to understand the world they walk. They think I don’t notice how they talk down to me, The way they smile when I speak of my dreams. Like I’m too soft to notice the sharpness of their words. But I am not a child, And I am not innocent. I am a girl who learned How to smile through the ache, How to laugh through the hollow, How to pretend that I don’t feel the walls closing in. They think I’m easy to fool, That I won’t catch the way they roll their eyes When I speak of the things I love. The toys that make me smile, The lines of  books that cling to my soul, The songs I bury myself in & the piano and violin melodies that feel like home in a world too loud. All dismissed, waved off, ridiculed, Labeled childish, unworthy of their time. Like my joy is an inconvenience to their lives. But I notice. I notice everything. I notice how they’ve built me in their minds— A fragile thing, easy to break, easy to ignore. They have no idea what it’s like to be me. They don’t know how my hands shake When I hold back tears in front of them. They don’t know how many words I swallow Just to keep the peace, How many pieces of myself I’ve hidden To make them more comfortable. They laugh _at me._ _Not with me._ They think I don’t see it, That I don’t feel it— The subtle cruelty hidden in their jokes, The way they twist my softness into stupidity. I am but a pitiful inclusion of their conversations. A mere placeholder in their group. A shadow they barely notice Until they need to feel smarter, stronger, better. And I let them. Because it’s easier to stay quiet, To let them believe they’re right, Than to fight against the weight of their indifference. In the end, I shrink. I fold myself into something smaller, Something quieter, Until I am nothing more than the version they created— A shadow of myself, Easy to laugh at, easy to control. But inside, I’m screaming. Inside, I’m crying. Because I don’t know how to explain What it feels like to be surrounded And still feel like the loneliest person in the room. They think they know me. But how could they? They’ve never looked past the smile I force, Never wondered why my hands tremble, Why my breath falters, Why my voice sometimes dies in my throat. I am surrounded by people, But I am alone in a way _I can’t explain._ Alone in the crowd, Alone in their presence, Alone in the silence I hide behind. I sit there, smiling, nodding, surrounded by their voices, Their laughter, their noise. And yet I am alone. Because they will never understand the weight I carry, the weight of a heart that beats in isolation. I pretend like I don’t care When they say I’m childish, That my love for vanilla makes me small. But inside, I am clawing at my own skin, Begging for someone to see me— Not the version of me they created, But the real me. Everyone likes vanilla. I like it a bit more. But they don’t get it, do they? How something so simple can mean everything when you feel so ******* lost. They mock me for it— Like it’s some childish obsession, Like it’s a flaw that I’m drawn to the soft, The pure, The things that make me feel whole In a world that’s always trying to tear me apart. They look at my quiet smile, my careful hands, And slap a label on my skin: innocent. Like I’m some sticker they can peel off, Stick wherever they please and forget. But I am not what they think I am. I am not a word whispered behind cupped hands, Not the soft thing they’ve mistaken for weak I love stickers. Bright, bold, beautiful things That I press into notebooks and corners of my world, Little pieces of colour in the chaos I can’t control. But I am not a sticker. I am not something they can pin down, Label me whatever they ******* want to. I am what I am, It is what it is, so deal with it or leave. If the consequence of me being me is loneliness, _then so be it._ I am many things, But I am not their innocent doll. I am not a joke, I am not their fool. I am not just a sticker. I am not just their label. I am a mosaic of cracks and scars, and one day, I will tear these labels from my skin and show them the strength they never saw. Who knows, maybe they might finally realise, why hurricanes are named after people. Too bad they’ll never take the time to know that. They’re too busy talking over me, too busy writing their own stories on the pages of my silence. I don’t need their pity. I don’t need their approval. But God, sometimes I wish just one of them would stop and look at me long enough to see the storm I carry, to hear the screams I choke back every day. Because I am tired of being invisible. Tired of being their afterthought. Tired of being underestimated, of being seen but never known. I am tired of sitting among friends and still feeling utterly, completely, Alone. And I inevitably find myself wondering — Will anyone ever know this loneliness? Will anyone ever stop long enough to see the girl who hides behind this smile? Or am I doomed to disappear, lost in a crowd that never bothered to look closer?
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She feels the world's weight in her chest, but deep within, she knows she holds the strength to rise. No matter how small, each step she takes is a victory over the whispers of doubt. She's not just surviving her anxiety—she's learning to bloom through it, one breath at a time.
0
Dec 17, 2024
Dec 17, 2024 at 12:53 PM UTC
One breath at a time.