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"Grief is the price of love that refused to fade. To feel its weight is not a curse, but a covenant."
Loss is not an event. It is a reckoning, a breaking, a transformation. What was is not lost, but woven into the unseen rhythm of existenceālike music carried on the wind, felt in the bones, never fully gone. They are in the echoes of a song that once played in the background of your laughter, in the melody that drifted through a shared moment so small at the time, yet now infinite in its absence. What is, is the ache that hums beneath the surface of your days, the way their name still forms on your lips before you remember the silence. And what will never be again is the cruelest symphonyāthe unfinished notes, the conversations that will remain forever unspoken, the future that was composed but will never be played.
But love does not die. It transforms. It moves from presence to memory, from words to vibration, from something seen to something felt. It lingers in the spaces they once filled, in the cadence of your voice, in the rhythm of your own heartbeat. Cymatics teaches us that sound, though invisible, shapes the worldāit bends water, forms patterns in sand, moves through us even when we cannot see it. And love is no different. It does not vanish. It imprints itself upon you, reverberating through every part of your being, shaping who you are in ways you will never fully understand.
To close yourself off to love is to close yourself off to pain. But to close yourself off at allāto retreat into numbness, to refuse to feelāis the greatest betrayal of all. Because the pain you carry is not suffering; it is proof that you lived, that you loved, that you dared to let someone matter so deeply that their absence now carves itself into your soul. Grief is not the enemy. It is loveās final form, the echo of something too profound to simply disappear. If you deny this pain, if you silence it, if you try to bury it beneath distraction and indifference, you are not sparing yourselfāyou are severing yourself from the most human truth there is.
To grieve is not to be broken. It is to stand in the storm of what was, what is, and what will never be, and let it pass through you without shutting the door. It is to honor every moment, every breath, every glance, every laugh that ever existed between you. Because if you pretend it does not hurt, you pretend they did not matter. And that is the only true loss.
The world does not care if you grieve. It does not stop for loss. But youāyou must care. You must stand in the pain, feel it, cherish it, because it is the last gift they gave you. It is proof that they lived, that they mattered, that their love was real enough to leave an echo in your soul. To grieve is not to suffer. It is to honor. It is to love beyond the limits of time.
The beating heart, the pulse in your chest, is not merely an organāit is the rhythm of your existence, the drum that has kept time through love, through loss, through every moment that has shaped you. Its cadence is not yours alone; it is a composition written by every soul that has ever touched your life, every voice that has ever spoken your name, every hand that has ever reached for yours. It is the rhythm of what was, what is, and what will never be again, all entwined in the unbroken song of your existence.
And so, you welcome the pain. Not as a wound, but as a sacred thing. Because love does not end. It only becomes something eternalāsomething unseen, but felt, forever shaping the life you live.
"To grieve is to bear witness to loveās eternityāto stand in the echoes of what once was, to honor what is, and to carry forward what will never be again."
K
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Cognitive Distortions that Add to Anxiety, Worry, and Stress
1. All-or-nothing thinking: Looking at things in black-or-white categories, with no middle ground (āIf I fall short of perfection, Iām a total failure.ā)
2. Overgeneralization: Generalizing from a single negative experience, expecting it to hold true forever (āI didnāt get hired for the job. Iāll never get any job.ā)
3. The mental filter: Focusing on the negatives while filtering out all the positives. Noticing the one thing that went wrong, rather than all the things that went right.
4. Diminishing the positive: Coming up with reasons why positive events donāt count (āI did well on the presentation, but that was just dumb luck.ā)
5. Jumping to conclusions: Making negative interpretations without actual evidence. You act like a mind reader (āI can tell she secretly hates me.ā) or a fortune teller (āI just know something terrible is going to happen.ā)
6. Catastrophizing: Expecting the worst-case scenario to happen (āThe pilot said weāre in for some turbulence. The planeās going to crash!ā)
7. Emotional reasoning: Believing that the way you feel reflects reality (āI feel frightened right now. That must mean Iām in real physical danger.ā)
8. āShouldsā and āshould-notsā: Holding yourself to a strict list of what you should and shouldnāt do and beating yourself up if you break any of the rule
9. Labeling: Labeling yourself based on mistakes and perceived shortcomings (āIām a failure; an idiot; a loser.ā)
10. Personalization: Assuming responsibility for things that are outside your control (āItās my fault my son got in an accident. I should have warned him to drive carefully in the rain.ā)
Source: http://www.helpguide.org/mental/anxiety_self_help.htm
Intimacy is not just physical. To crave a persons presence and energy rather than just their body is the purest form of intimacy.
Steps to Self-forgiveness
1. Take responsibility for what you said or did.
2. Think about how you were feeling at the time, or what was driving you to act in that way.
3. Try to identify the underlying need, or the motive behind the thing you now regret. (For example, respect from others, approval from others, wanting to feel good about yourself, wanting to pay another back, and so on.)
4. Express your regrets and attempt to make amends if your words or your actions have affected someone else.
5. Think of how youāll change and will act differently, if the same situation occurs again. This is the real person that you truly want to be.
6. Write yourself a caring and empathic letter where you forgive yourself, and tell yourself you can move on.
7. Remember that youāre human and we all have deep regrets; and weāre all on a journey ā and no-one has arrived.
How to be Your own Best Friend
1. Treat yourself the way you would treat a person who you loved, highly valued, and cared about.
2. Always love yourself ā no matter what!
3. Only say positive, compassionate, understanding and affirming things about, and to, yourself.
4. Hold your own hand in tough and stressful times. Donāt abandon yourself.
5. Respect yourself, and the efforts you are making to be a better person, and to change and grow.
6. Understand your limitations, be patient with yourself. Accept that it takes time to master anything at all.
7. Be kind to yourself when you feel self-critical, or you want to be judgmental, or hard on yourself.
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Um yeaā¦.
"Oh dang, they're onto me... time to act normal"
(Source)