Not everyone breaks loudly

Not Everyone Breaks Loudly

Do you notice the drizzle before the rain? That subtle shift in energy before a thunderstorm? The crackling in the air, promising something between darkness and release? It’s something you can observe in people too… the slightly slower replies, the moments where someone pulls back just enough for it to feel different, but not enough for you to say anything.

Most people don’t notice. Or they notice too late. They wait for something more obvious. Something real. Something less mysterious and more tangible. A breakdown. A dramatic silence. Maybe even tears. But not everyone breaks like that. Not everyone breaks loudly.

Some people fall apart while still showing up with a smile. They reply to messages. They go to work. They do what needs to be done. They ask about your day. They smile through all of it. You wouldn’t know anything is wrong unless you were really paying attention. And even then, you might second-guess it. Because these are the people who always seem to be fine. Reliable. Capable. Unshakeable. Unbreakable.

They’re the ones who hold everyone else. Who check in when you’ve gone quiet. Who sense your mood before you’ve figured it out yourself. Who listen. Who remember. Who make space for your chaos without making it about them. And they never ask for anything in return… not really… not while they’re taking care of you.

You get used to them being solid. Present. Uncomplicated. But what you don’t see is the part where they don’t let themselves unravel. Not in front of anyone. Maybe not even in private. They’ve been holding things together for so long that falling apart feels unfamiliar. Maybe even dangerous. They are living in restraints. With restraint.

When they start slipping, it’s quiet. Their messages get shorter. Or they stop sending them altogether. They go from being fully there to slightly elsewhere. Still functioning. Still polite. Still kind. But something is missing. And if you don’t look closely, you’ll miss it too. The smile is still there… but the light in their eyes is slightly dimmer.

They won’t ask for help. They won’t say, “I don’t feel like myself right now.” They won’t say, “Please notice I’m not okay.” Because if they have to say it, it already feels like they’ve failed at being who they’ve always been for everyone else. It feels like a failure. And it opens a path to a spiral they’ve been trying hard to avoid.

The truth is, they want someone to notice without being told. To show up anyway. To see the cracks in the places they’ve tried so carefully to keep smooth. To say, “I see you” before they vanish completely. They long to be understood without translation… without needing to amplify themselves… because they like to stay invisible… even when they need to be seen.

And I know that’s a lot to ask. But it’s what they need. What I need, if I’m being honest. Not a saviour. Not a solution. Just someone who pays enough attention to realise that being quiet doesn’t always mean being fine.

So if someone close to you starts to pull back a little, don’t ignore it. Don’t chalk it up to them being busy or tired or “just the way they are.” Ask again. Stay close. Notice the drizzle. Because some people won’t break in front of you… but they still need to be held. Even if they never say it.

And all this said: I’m quiet, but I’m alright. Physically and mentally, I’m okay. I’m tired, but not unravelled. I don’t need to be held. Not right now. This post is a reaction… maybe even a message to the woman I was in 2018. It’s okay to fall apart. It’s okay to ask for help. Even if the 2018 me still needed almost five more years to realise it.

I still believe the drizzle matters. The almosts. The nearly-unspoken. The things that seem small but mean everything. That’s where people slip through unnoticed. And that’s where we need to start seeing each other better.

I still often feel it too. But less.
And that feels… like growing up, or turning mellow.
Becoming wiser and more aware with age.
Or maybe… is this healing?

Throwback Thursday: Bicycle Randomness, Then and Now


I wrote the original Bicycle Randomness in 2018, a quiet burst of fragmented truths, scribbled from a place of unfiltered feeling, raw and a little chaotic. Today, I still write lists. But the feeling is different. The ground beneath me is steadier now. The words may have changed, but the impulse to name what is real to me remains. I invite you to see a scattered portrait of who I was and who I am. (Bicycle randomness 2018)

  • I no longer need to explain myself. That freedom is new, and I welcome it.
  • I like who I am becoming, and I do not feel the urge to apologise for who I was. No regrets.
  • There is calm in my mornings now, even when I fill the house with music.
  • I live in a home that fits me, even if it surprises others. It’s filled with colour, but it is not cluttered, I don’t like knickknacks. There is (unique) art on the walls, I cherish it immensely.
  • I still write every day. It is not a ritual. It is a pulse. It is my way to breathe underwater.
  • I do not need people to get me. I just want to be met with kindness. I am an acquired taste. Like wine.
  • I am not lonely. I just like my own company. It’s unusual, but it is true for me.
  • My hair is silver in places, and I like it more than I ever thought I would.
  • My kids are growing into themselves. Watching that is a gift. They are amazing people and they fill me with pride.
  • I love music that makes me move, that makes me think, that inspires poems. I love music. And I love silence too.
  • I show up with care, not with pursuit.
  • I still cry sometimes, because I care more deeply now, not less.
  • I used to seek meaning in every interaction. Now I let some moments pass.
  • Everything happens for a reason, but I no longer need to know or understand it. I know how to accept it and live with it.
  • I am good in my job as a preschool teacher. I do not need praise to know it.
  • I like small groups, deep talks, and early nights. And late nights too.
  • I no longer need to be understood by those who are not willing to listen.
  • The contradictions are a part of me. They are a part of my writing too.
  • I have boundaries now. They are firm, and they are kind.
  • I am not overwhelmed, just selective.
  • I do not share everything. That is not secrecy. I just don’t need anyone to know everything anymore.
  • I say no with ease. I say yes with care.
  • I am not chatty, but I say what I mean and mean what I say.
  • I do not chase. I respond.
  • I am not looking for drama. I am choosing peace.
  • I still love making lists. They keep me grounded.
  • I do not regret anything. Every path led me here, and I like this place.
  • I still read horoscopes, not for answers, but for the poetry.
  • I am more honest now. Especially with myself.
  • I no longer ask why. The answer is rarely satisfying.
  • I believe in consistency, not intensity. Though I know that I am both. Consistent and intense.
  • My softness is deliberate. My strength is quiet.
  • I know my worth. I know what I need.
  • There are stories I no longer need to revisit to understand myself. It’s called growth or healing. That doesn’t mean that the past doesn’t affect me anymore, I just know how to deal with it from a place of peace.
  • I am not waiting. I am living.
  • I am not holding on. I am here.
  • I am not unfinished. I am just in motion.

(…and I will keep going and going and going.)

Life is a work in progress. We evolve and change all the time, even if it feels subtle, but when we look back, it becomes visible. I am still the same, and yet I am not who I was. And I will become someone I am not yet some day too.

Cathy

from absence to presence

Posted for Mental Health Awareness Month

Some things take years to name. And still, they shape every part of who we become.

I was born into absence. Not into poverty, not into physical violence, but into a silence that shaped everything I later became. There was a house, there were adults, there were routines… but there was no soft place to land. No arms that held me without conditions. No voice that asked, “How do you feel?”

Instead, there were expectations: be good, be quiet, be helpful. Love was a test I had to pass by sacrificing myself. If I loved my mother, I had to take care of her needs when I was only four. If I loved my family, I had to disappear when my presence became inconvenient. I was never hit, but I was unseen. I was never starved, but I was hollow.

I remember sitting by the window, dressed up, waiting for my father’s car to pull up. But I waited in vain… he didn’t come. The excuses were shallow. I felt forgotten and hurt. My grandmother would sneer and say that even my father didn’t care about me. She was also the one who told me I was not worth the air I was breathing… a waste of skin. My mother was too numb, too caught up in her illness to protect me.

Later, I learned my father couldn’t bring together the family he had left and the one he chose next. He didn’t know how… probably because of guilt. But none of that softened the silence he left behind. His absence was louder than words. I learned early that love could leave. That silence was safer than asking for more. That presence didn’t guarantee anything. That fear never fully disappeared. I still carry it… the fear of being too much, of being left, of not being enough to stay for.

There were days I wanted to disappear. Not dramatically. Just… fade. I often wondered if anyone would notice. Or care. I didn’t feel real unless I was needed. And when I wasn’t, I disappeared into myself. There were no diagnoses, no interventions. Just a little girl carrying grief that wasn’t hers. Until I was seven years old, I barely spoke to anyone outside my immediate family. I was silent at school, silent among strangers. It wasn’t shyness. It was something deeper… a sense that my voice didn’t matter, or that it wasn’t safe to use. No one did anything about it. No one felt the need to find out why I didn’t speak. And so I learned early that my silence was more acceptable than my presence.

I could have vanished. I could have become numb. I could have chased oblivion and found comfort in destruction. I didn’t. I chose a harder path.

I chose presence.

Not because I had help. I didn’t. I had three therapy sessions and one blister of medication. That was in 2019, when I was 36, proof that some wounds linger long before we name them. I couldn’t talk about what hurt because my voice was locked somewhere inside my chest. I survived not through intervention, but through instinct.

I wrote. I bled into pages. I listened to music like it was scripture. I held myself in the night when no one else would. And somehow, through all of it, I also held others. Quietly. Faithfully. Unrecognised.

And when I asked for help… on the rare occasion I reached out, raw and exposed… I was told to get professional help. As if all my self-healing, all the decades of surviving without imploding, meant nothing. As if I were still the damaged one. Maybe the idea of my wholeness makes some people uncomfortable… maybe they need me to stay small.

But I am not damaged.

I am someone who turned silence into language. Who turned emotional starvation into fierce love. Who broke cycles instead of repeating them. I am a mother who gives what she never received. I am a teacher who sees the invisible children. I am a woman who carries her contradictions with grace.

There are still parts of me I don’t often speak about. I used to hurt myself. Quietly. It gave shape to the ache I couldn’t explain. Pain made me feel real when nothing else did. I never hid it, but no one ever asked. I stopped, eventually… replaced the blade with a pen. But the memory of those moments still lives under my skin.

And there are moments, even now, when I am struggling. When I am thinking about how easy it would be to numb my fears and pain with a blade against my skin. Just once. Sweet relief. But I don’t. So far, I have been able to resist that temptation.

Sometimes, even now, anxiety sneaks in. My heart races. My breath shortens. It doesn’t happen often, but when it does, I recognise it. I let it pass. I stay with it now. I don’t run. That’s how I know I’ve changed.

There is still fear. Still sadness. Still those days when I feel like I’m unravelling. But I am not ashamed of them anymore. They are not signs of failure. They are the soft reminders that I have depth, that I survived, that I still feel.

I once said, “Despite it all, I turned out quite normal.” Someone laughed and said, “With all due respect, you are not normal.” And they were right. I am not. I am not numb. I am not simple. I am not easy.

I am still here in the quietest, most enduring ways. My husband has been part of that quiet. His support isn’t loud or showy, and we don’t speak about most of what’s written here… by my choice, but he is there in the small things. In the steadiness. In the way he leaves space for me to be as I am. That matters more than he knows.

I feel deeply and live honestly. I want to be seen… not to be saved, but to be seen simply as the person I am. And even when I fear I’m too much, I overthink and retreat. I quiet myself before anyone else can. I try not to take up space. But deep down, I still hope someone might see me and not turn away.

I turned from absence to presence by refusing to disappear. I stitched myself together with poems, small victories, and the decision to keep loving… even when it hurt. Even when it was not returned. Even when it would have been easier to break.

This is who I became: not someone untouched by trauma… but someone who made meaning out of it. Not someone who pretends to be okay… but someone who is okay because she stopped pretending.

I am not broken. I am whole… in all my layers. And I did it myself. And I am still becoming.

If you’re reading this during Mental Health Awareness Month and wondering if your story matters… it does. Even in silence. Even in struggle. Even when no one sees the work you’re doing just to stay. You are not alone.

Thank you for being part of my present.

no drama (stream of consciousness)

As of May, all my poetry and writing is exclusive to this blog.

I quietly left Threads after reading Meta’s updated terms and conditions. No announcement, no fuss… just like when I left Facebook and Twitter. A silent choice that felt necessary.

I still have an Instagram account, but it is private, and I mostly use it to chat. I still use WhatsApp because I need it for work. I am not completely offline, and I am not trying to disappear.

But I have started to think more carefully about where and how I exist online.

And when it comes to sharing my writing, I am becoming more intentional.

At the moment, the only public places where my words live are here and on SoundCloud. And honestly, that feels right for now.

I know I am not Meta’s target… I am not famous. I am not a bestselling author. I am not a poet with thousands of followers. But I am a writer. And that counts for something… at least for me it does.

I put pieces of myself into every poem, every line, every strange little fragment I share. And I do not want my voice absorbed into some faceless system, used to train an AI… stripped of meaning, stripped of origin, stripped of consent.

I do not share a lot of personal details online anymore. I did for a while, and if you dig through this blog, you will still find glimpses of that. But I do not write to go viral. I do not write for algorithms. I write because I love it. Because it steadies me. Because it helps me exist more truthfully.

I love putting my words online. I love the idea of someone stumbling across a line I wrote and feeling understood. I want my words to touch people. I want to leave a trace. But I want to do it on my terms.

And I know they do reach people. Sometimes, I see the quiet proof… visitors from different corners of the world, stopping by, staying a moment. That means more than I can say.

If something here touches you, feel free to share it with others. Just a gentle mention, a link, a line… I only ask that it is done with care. These words may be personal, but they are not meant to be locked away.

Yes, I want to be visible. I want my words to reach someone, somewhere.
Maybe that is a quiet kind of longing we all carry… to be seen, to be felt, to leave something behind.

It might make me seem a little controlling. It might sound like I take myself too seriously sometimes.
But I care about what I create. I care about where it ends up.

And that care… it feels right.

We’ll see where the next steps take us.
But for now… thank you all for being here on this quiet journey with me.

Thank you. Merci.

the bittersweet paradox

The capacity to feel deeply, to hurt deeply, is what allows us to also love deeply, to find joy in the midst of sorrow, and to discover the profound meaning that lies at the heart of being human.This emotional depth is both a blessing and a curse – the price we pay for being able to engage with the world and with each other on such a visceral, meaningful level. When we open ourselves up to the full spectrum of human emotions, we make ourselves vulnerable. We risk being hurt, devastated, consumed by anguish.

Yet, it is precisely this willingness to be vulnerable that enables us to form the deepest, most nourishing bonds. When we hurt deeply, it demonstrates our ability to invest ourselves completely in relationships and experiences. The pain of heartbreak is the flip side of our capacity to love passionately.

And it is this depth of feeling – our range from ecstasy to agony – that allows us to find profound beauty and meaning amidst the sorrow. In the darkest of times, we can still uncover moments of transcendent joy, profound gratitude, and abiding hope. Our emotional complexity is what makes us fully, viscerally alive.

This is the bittersweet paradox at the heart of the human experience. The very qualities that leave us susceptible to suffering – our sensitivity, our capacity for attachment, our willingness to be emotionally raw – are the same qualities that enable us to engage with the world in the most meaningful way.

To feel deeply is to hurt deeply. But it is also to love deeply, to find exquisite pockets of light in the darkness, and to discover the profound significance that lies at the core of being human. It is the price we pay for being fully, gloriously alive.

scars

These scars, they are not blemishes,
But symbols of my strength,
Guiding me through the darkest times,
To find my light at length.

They speak of courage in the face of adversity,
Of wounds that healed, yet left their trace,
Reminders that I’ve weathered life’s storms,
And emerged with a stronger, wiser grace.

These scars, they are not flaws to hide,
But badges of honor, worn with pride,
For they represent the growth I’ve found,
The lessons learned, the ground I’ve ground.

They are the proof that I can endure,
That darkness cannot dim my light for sure,
That I will rise, time and time again,
Unbroken, unshaken, and without disdain.

In the depths of my scars, I see my strength,
A fortitude that knows no bounds,
A resilience that cannot be bound,
A spirit that forever resounds.

So I wear these scars with reverence and grace,
Embracing the story they boldly trace,
For they are the map of my journey so far,
A testament to the warrior that I are.

They remind me that I have the power to heal,
To overcome, to conquer, and to reveal
The true essence of who I’m meant to be,
A vision of hope, a light for all to see.

These scars, they are not burdens to bear,
But gifts that have shaped me, beyond compare,
Empowering me to face each new day,
With the strength to pave my own way.

So I celebrate these scars, my battle-worn marks,
For they are the proof that I’ve walked through the dark,
And emerged stronger, wiser, and more complete,
Ready to embrace the light that I meet.

###

“Joffer Cathy, why do you have these light lines there” [4 year old points to my arms]

“they are a part of who I used to be and who I became” [as soon as I said it, I knew I said too much and braced myself]

[shrugs] “may I have the felt-tip pens to colour?]

I had this conversation this morning with a little girl at work. I am 41 and talking about my scars and self-harm scares me shitless. Mostly because I know I could relapse again and again…

There you are

There you are, my friend. I almost missed you. Almost. But not really. I was afraid that you would be back and cover me with your grey veil. And I was right. You can never leave me. We belong together; you and me. I knew you’d be back, that’s why I enjoyed every day without you. I made the best of my carefree days. But I feel your pull. It’s strong. I cannot say if it is stronger or weaker than it used to be… But that’s not important. I am too tired to fight you. I am too tired to play hide and seek with you. At the same time, I am also determined to not be submissive and accept the way you want to take my power away from me.

I know, people will say that it’s the change of seasons. It’s the rain. The clouds. The time off work. They will roll their eyes and say: she’s at it again. Whatever they can find to put the blame on. But you are not SAD. You are my disability. You are what paralyses me and makes it hard to get out of bed. You are what makes me forget my personal hygiene because brushing my teeth takes too much energy from me. You are what makes me eye knives and cutters and remember the ways I used to hurt myself to cope with the feelings you imposed on me.

It’s hard to understand ADD and it is very hard to explain it to people as it is different for everyone affected. But the ADD is part of your charm, isn’t it?? It is part of why you come back again and again. Even if I don’t want you here. I don’t want to be miserable. I don’t want to be in pain. I don’t want to hurt myself.

It’s cold here, and the emotions in my belly are threatening to leave through my eyes. Never through my mouth. There is no voice in me when you are there. There are no words. Only silence. And it is the loudest scream you’ll never hear.

What can I do to escape you? Where can I hide when I know that you will always find me. I cannot run away from you. You are my cage. I love you, set me free.

There is nothing I can do. If I’ve learnt anything it is that I need to let you happen to me. I need to allow your presents and your presence and make the best of it. And when you are here, clinging to my skin, like a parasite to my thoughts, I need to take care of my self. Because no one else can. It’s all in me. I can shower myself in kindness. I can be nice to myself and go easy on me. I am sure I can do it once you decide to leave again. And I know, even though right now the grey is threatening to turn into black – a black hole, I know that there is a sunrise to watch tomorrow. There is new music to hear. There are reasons to laugh out loud. But not tonight. Not when your grip on me is so tight. Not when I am dreading the dreams and nightmares you bring at night.

I’ll fight a silent battle until I am back to who I am. A shining star in my own right. In my own write. Most people won’t even notice that you are visiting once again. My mask is in place. If they can’t see it, it is not there. I am not there.

Sunday Scribblings #142 – Escape

There were no more steps to take, no more roads to walk. The light was fading and the ocean was drowning in itself. During those cold winter nights she used to ask to be held, but things had changed. Nothing was the same anymore and she didn’t want to admit that she knew why. The world around her fell apart and she was tied to a boulder rolling down a mountain. She didn’t scream or yell. There was no escape. She didn’t know why she was here now. Everyday had been the same. An illusion of normalcy. But there was an underlying sadness, a melancholy undertone in everything she did. Until one day she woke up with desperation leaking out of her eyes.

The wild river was claiming her, and she didn’t stand a chance to fight for air. Everything that once felt good felt wrong now. Her skin felt too tight. Everything was tingling in the wrong way. Everything turned out to be nothing, in the end. And while she was walking and trying to remember where she was going and why she was feeling like going mad, the rain drenched her to the bone, as if it was highlighting her messy state of mind for everyone to see.

There was no escape from her mind and from her thoughts. There was no escape from the downward spiral and the change that was waiting around the corner. But she was trapped in the nature of all things that kept her hostage. She didn’t understand that there was a future for her. That things could be different. But something drove her to move. It was like something inside of her ordered her to put one foot in front of the other. She walked faster. And faster. Until she was running. Her lungs were burning and her legs felt heavy. She was not used to physical activities. But something kept her moving. The rain pelted her face, plastering her hair against her cheek. She was cold and shivering. Inside and outside too. She tried shaking everything off that held her back. She tried running away from herself. Running, just running. And it didn’t matter where she was going. She had to keep moving. She had to keep herself busy to escape the desperation that was clinging to her eyelashes. The sun set and the moon rose. The sun rose and the moon set. Day after day, and she kept moving. She kept running, until, in the end, her skin fit her mind again.

###

Sunday Scribblings are prompts Aaron shares every Wednesday on his blog: https://confusingmiddle.com/2023/10/18/sunday-scribblings-142/ I haven’t used a prompt in a long while, I admit. If you read yesterday’s post, you will understand. Check out Aaron’s blog and consider writing for those prompts, it is great fun and inspiring too.

Be kind!

People are very weird, even more so on the internet.

Just a couple of days ago, a band I used to follow on every platform, a band that disbanded in 2020, posted a statement that one of their members made a suicide attempt. The statement shared all kinds of very personal information about mental illnesses and it also addresses rumours that have been floating around for years, about said musician.

I am, of course, talking about Anathema and Daniel Cavanagh.

Anathema’s statement on Facebook (I hope the link works, I don’t use FB, I deactivated my account a while ago)

I was indeed shocked to read the statement, because I was heavily influenced by this band during my formative years. Even now, when I need something comforting, I go back to this band’s music, and I am looking forward to the new project that has been announced a while ago – Weather Systems. Now, I am not a die-hard fan, I am not one who reads rumours or reads comments on posts, but this time, I did. And I shouldn’t have.

Instead of showing compassion though, there are comments (on Instagram) wondering if the statement is even true or if it is a way of extorting more money from fans – Mr Cavanagh, through a fan of the band, was/is asking fans to donate money to a Go Fund Me campaign to be able to record a new album of his new project – Weather Systems.

Where is all this hate coming from? And why is it directed towards a literal stranger? A man who is on his knees as it is.

There are also the comments telling that they love him and how much he influenced them. Nice ones. But they don’t stick out as much.

I wonder… If I were a musician who was suffering through all this, and decided that it is time to step forward, to strip my soul bare; if I read those comments, the nice ones would certainly give me a lift, but the negative ones, I think they would send me down a downward spiral.

What is happening in this world that people can’t show a little respect, compassion, and empathy towards a man who felt so wrong on this earth that he wanted to erase his existence?

I cannot understand this. Not one bit. It makes me lose faith in humanity.

Be kind. Be gentle. And don’t judge without knowing the facts. Everyone is fighting a battle, even if we can’t see it.

To Dan, I wish lots of strength, love, and patience. The world is a better place with you in it. 💜✨💜

Listen to CATHEDRAL by Weather Systems on #SoundCloud
https://soundcloud.app.goo.gl/4TYve

Showered with sadness

One moment, I was happily dancing in the rain,

The next I was crying, cowering in my shower’s corner.

The manic moments got fewer while the depressive episodes grew longer every time. Rationally, I knew that it was all in my head. I knew that I was allowed to live and to love and to accept affection too. But during the depressive moments, I couldn’t remember those things; I couldn’t hear them. The voices in my head telling me that I am a waste of space or that I don’t matter, they were louder than any reason or sense. And they hurt. So much. Every time a little more. I tried to silence them with music. I tried to mum them with positive thoughts. I even tried to cut them out of my skin and singing them to sleep with alcohol and pills. Nothing worked.

And now I sat here in the shower hiding in the corner, naked and shivering. 

These fragile and frail moments were my secret. But I am not sure how well I hid it.

I read in a book that we need to talk and speak up to remind our minds that we are real and alive. I was thinking about that under the cold shower spray. Sobbing, I bit the skin on my arm. The gesture was not to hurt me, but to feel and root my overwhelmed self. I do that too during sex, but that’s more to avoid making too much noise. That’s a different subject. 

I watched the water run down my legs in rivulets, little rivers of sorrow. It was a mix of the shower spray, my tears, and, let’s face it, snot was in the mix too. But I was too far gone to care.  I tried remembering what had triggered this explosion of emotions, but I couldn’t remember. And it agitated me even more. I forgot so much. Was I too focussed on myself, or not enough? I was just trying to stay alive! The lack of understanding, of meaning, of connection, mixed with insomnia, abject loneliness, and solitude – it was killing me. Or maybe, maybe I was killing myself. Self-loathing, self-destructive, absent from my self.

The water kept caressing the goosebumps all over my body. I hugged myself tighter and bit my skin harder. I looked up to the ceiling. And when I looked down at my knees again, I felt empty. As if this was not me anymore. As if someone had found a switch to turn my emotions off. My sobbing stopped. I got up and turned to water off. Empty. Just going through the motions. As if it was not me. The lights were still on, but no one was at home anymore. I was a robot. A puppet on my mind’s strings. I grew calm but exhausted. Tired. So so tired.

I grabbed my towel and dried off without much care. Heading to my bedroom, I sat down on the mattress, naked as I was; grabbed my pillow – the one I cuddle at night, and rolled myself into a position that made me as small as possible. Fetal position.

I remember thinking that I was not thinking anymore. And then I drifted off.

In the middle of the night, I woke up because I was trembling and felt cold. I covered myself with the sheets and fell into a dreamless slumber. The next time I woke up, it saw the morning light illuminating my bedroom. I felt rested but hungover from the heavy emotions I had felt the night before. I had the image in my head of what a pitiful sight I had been in the shower. Everything else was still a bit foggy.

But as I said, these moments of vulnerability and of my fragile mind being on full display are my secrets. Just mine. No one will ever know the truth.

There was something on my arm; a bruise was forming, the skin was changing colours, reminding me of what I had done.

In sane moments, I wonder why I can’t be normal. Wouldn’t it be easier to be detached from myself more often? Who knows? Who cares? In the end, it doesn’t matter. 

We live. We die. And everything we feel in between is not real for anyone but us.

(718 words/20minutes)

Kneeling

I am kneeling

Trying to see the sky

But the shadows conceal its beauty

Staggering through the laughing crowd

The blood is pounding in my ears

A song plays behind my eyes

I need to move, or else I will combust

My twin is laughing; my soul is weeping

And I see your thoughts

And I feel your words

I am hiding

Maybe I will find what I need while

I am on my knees.

Fifteen months

(Repost from September 16th, 2016)

And then it happened, and her demons won. Just like that and without a fair warning. They didn’t play fair. For fifteen months she had fought them off, and now she had lost the battle with her self-harming demons. Just two small cuts. Usually, she only made one deep incision. But cutting along existing scars proved challenging. And fascinating. The way the skin stretched without breaking. The way she realised that the pain from cutting her skin stopped the moment it began to bleed.

But something wasn’t right. Something was not like she remembered it. She didn’t feel the usual calm settle down over her like a relaxing fog. This time, she stayed agitated. Unsettled. Two cuts. Very small, yet there. They hadn’t opened the valve that allowed her skin to expand and give her more room to breathe. Not this time. This time, the cuts were a testimony to her failure as an adult. She was broken beyond repair. They were affirming her failure. Affirming that she was just a freak. Nothing more.

She grew restless. She was determined to punish herself and her body for all the things that weren’t right – mostly her mind.

Transfixed, she watched the drops of blood sliding down her wrist. Had it ever bled this much? Had she cut too deep? Was she done, or was there more cutting to do to ease her troubled soul? She started shaking violently. She cleaned the box cutter in a hurry, before returning it to its place on the shelf. She couldn’t stand its sight anymore.

She ran her arm under the sink and still reeling, she lit a cigarette. She claimed to be a non-smoker but once in a while; she liked the taste of her Luckies. This time, it was different – not calming her nerves, and still shaking all over, she felt so nauseous from the smoke that she put the cigarette out.

She considered drinking a shot of vodka, but she had promised to herself to be abstinent from alcohol and carbohydrates for at least two weeks. She had no intention of breaking that vow. Even under these circumstances. Or was it despite them? She had to stick to something.

But what was she supposed to do? All alone. She called her best friend, but she was busy. It was the usual scenario: she needed someone, but the world was too busy to care. She never pretended to be the centre of the universe, but she gave all the time, and when she needed a shoulder, some support, nobody was there.

On a whim, she messaged her ex-affair. It would have been their first anniversary. Did he know? He didn’t, but it was okay. The moment she heard his voice, she had to swallow down a wave of tears. She hadn’t believed that he would pick up the phone, but he had. He had always been a good listener. And even now, after months of silence between them, he did the same – he listened. Giving gentle advice, never judging. He held his narcissistic self under control while she confessed and confided in him what she had never confessed or admitted to anyone. She had harmed herself. Now she felt ashamed and exhausted. The tension hadn’t left. But his voice was reassuring, comforting. She never wanted to show him his weaknesses, but now she had done it anyway. He knew. She was naked, soul-stripped in front of him. He stirred the conversation in a different direction. And she let him, fully aware that he was asking for something in return. Nothing was for free.

On a path to self-destruction phone sex with him was just another step towards her final demise. Was she his prostitute? For him, she was. She was allowed to unload her emotional crap as long as she paid her debts with her body. She hated herself either way. This didn’t change a thing. And yet, she felt proud when she heard his moans and his erratic breathing. She didn’t feel dirty or ashamed that he had made her cum twice too. It was just words. A fantasy. Orders she bs followed. But sometimes, it was more. It had released the rest of the tension that had kept her on edge for so long, and when he told her so, knowing exactly how she felt, she had laughed out loud — a genuine s.
The earlier thoughts were forgotten. Not really forgotten, just pushed aside. She was still shaking all over. But there had been someone who had caught her, and it meant a lot to her. On a day, when she had hinted so many times, in front of so many people about all the things that weren’t right, and nobody asked if she was okay or needed help; on a day when she felt invisible and unseen, one person had seen her. And he had loved her. For how long it would last didn’t matter. He had been there when she had needed him. And it had indeed changed her day. Her demons were still hiding in the shadows. Bloodhounds. She wasn’t sure if she could keep them at bay, for she would try — fifteen months or longer.

I shared this piece of fiction because I stumbled across it today, and I liked that comment so much. The music I had added was Help Me by Maximilian Hecker

nothing as it seems.

Shelly sat on her bed, the laptop heating her thighs and knees. Things had changed; she had. Months ago, it was easy just to let every thought spill onto her screen, but now, it was a struggle even to write a word. She defended her silence with writer’s block; or the fact that she worked so much. It had never bothered her before. She started censoring herself and her writing when she noticed the traffic on her blog was coming consistently. Readers or viewers came by daily to see if she had shared something. Where they waiting for her to share some more of her gruesome inner life? Where they waiting in the shadows, silently judging, ready to twist her words in real life? She hated the thought that people she knew read her words. She wasn’t embarrassed, she was just so naked on her blog, and she was afraid that her fragile mind would destroy the image of herself that she tried to hold upright. She tried to appear humorous and composed, relaxed and focused. But she wasn’t. Inside she was always struggling, wondering what she should have done differently; what she should have said instead of what she said; trying to remember everything so that she could make life easier for everyone who had to endure her presence.

Shelly had taken all her courage to tell her colleagues at work that she is mentally ill – depression. But she was not sad enough, not tired enough, not silent enough, not lethargic enough. She was functional. They didn’t see that she cried every day in her car on her way to work. They didn’t see how draining work was for her. They didn’t see that every little accomplishment came with a mountain of doubts and crippling thoughts.

Shelly had a lot to say, but nothing was worthy of her readers. She checked the stats and updated blogs. Nothing was inspiring, yet everything she read was inspiring. People had things to say and to share with the world. She had once been like that. Once, before her mind had decided to tell her lies again. Lies, all lies. And not even music was helping anymore.

Shelly closed the lid of her laptop and listened as the heater went silent. It was time to catch some sleep. Tomorrow, people who look at here again and wonder why she made such a fuss about depression when she didn’t look depressed. She was even smiling. But every smile came with a price. Frail. She was fragile, and if she weren’t careful, she would break apart.

Shelly turned to her side and pulled the blanket up over her head. It was comforting to be hidden from the world, and she slipped into a colourless dream.

#tbt what a difference 17 years make

This is an old picture of me. I like it quite a bit. In a time without photoshop or filters, I looked like this when the sun was about to go to sleep and the first half of the bottle of wine was empty, lol

There are not many pictures of me as a young woman; here I was 19. (My husband took the photo in 2002)

I was in Brittany with my husband, my sister, and three German guys whose lack of knowledge of the French language made for a couple of running gags that are still existing 17 years later. My sister married one of the guys and ran off with him. She never came back home again. (Well, she did, but only about a handful of times in all these years…)

The woman on this picture is not the same woman I am today. And that is good. Physically, I stayed the same height, just a little wider – more to love?! Emotionally, I am a different person.

Writing these sentences is quite trying. I am not my best friend and focusing on nice things to say about myself is hard. I wrote a lot that put me down but erased all the negativity again.

The woman on the picture is a strong one. She achieved every goal without any emotional support. In fact, she was often told that she was stupid and not good enough for anything at all. A lot of my emotional damage comes from this time and the years before that. Caring for my mom as a child was challenging, but I was naive and didn’t know it any other way. It became a burden when I was a teenager. I believe that if I had been treated with more love and care from my family, a lot of my mental issues would not exist. Maybe that is a bold statement. Maybe I was born this way. Maybe I was born with a predisposition… I don’t know.

But yeah, this woman on that picture, that version of myself had a goal in life. And I achieved it. And despite everything (and the mental health…) I became a successful woman. And I did it all without any help from my family. Granted, I often wonder why no one was ever there for me in times of need, why did I have to fight alone; but in the end, it doesn’t matter. Because I got shit done. It would have been easy to find excuses, drop out of school and do nothing – but that was not how I was wired. And so, I got my driving license, I got my professional degree from a university of applied sciences, I have a family with loving children (and they are loved and supported unconditionally) and I was told often enough that I would never become a good mom when I was pregnant with my first child… No matter what I did and no matter how many successes I had to celebrate, my family always found something negative to say about it, and I was always a failure for them.

But what can we do? We all fight battles and we all have a past. I am not trying to belittle mine, but my own experiences aren’t better or worse than yours. The only difference is that they are mine…

Below is a picture of me with my two angels. They didn’t want to let me go to work so they decided to pin me down to the bed by climbing on top of me.

What a difference 17 years make!

Et le temps court…

My bed is empty. My mind is full. I am tired, fighting a headache. Lying in the dark, I am listening to the rain. The window is open, and I feel the breeze on my skin. I know I should be asleep, it would ease the headache and maybe prevent the bad mood I am sure I will suffer in the morning. But I can’t fall asleep. I had troubles letting go the last few nights — dreams; not a nightmare, just unsettling dreams.

I have so many things to say and to share, and yet, they don’t matter, and so I keep them to myself.

There are times when I share most everything on my mind. I let my fingers write, and my mind think, and I just float on that wave that jumps from one thought to the next. I can’t seem to do that right now. (Although I am doing it) It just feels like stealing your time and attention. I know that you give it freely or else you wouldn’t be here, but my mind is trying to tell me that no one cares and that I don’t matter?

Why am I sabotaging myself this much? After all, I am an okay person. Ordinary, but okay.

I ordered new music today (her name is Calla – animal choir). And I watched two movies (untamed heart and pump up the volume) with my favourite actor (Christian Slater). I also listened to music by Coastlands (postrock from Oregon/USA), burnt down an incense stick (sandalwood) and ate pizza (prosciutto). I read a couple of pages in my book (the I undiscovered gyrl by Allison Burnett)…

Who cares?! I want you to care, to be honest, because I want you to care about me. But again, who cares about this narcissistic vanity.

Do you dream about specific colours? I am used to having dreams that repeat themselves. They used to be in a green hue. Like a green veil or fog in front of my eyes… Nowadays that fog or veil is blue, but the images I see – the pictures in my dream are still the same.

Maybe the breeze and the rain will let me fall asleep eventually anyway… Who knows?

The title of this post is French and could be translated to “the time keeps running”

*hugs*

Cathy