And as I grew older, I began to understand her better too:
You don’t feel particularly great at anything. You don’t really want much in terms of big, extravagant goals.
You just want to make everyone feel welcomed and loved. To support them. To have a family. To be loved.
But the world isn’t too kind to simple ambitions like these, you soon find out you have to work for everything you want.
And sometimes it feels like you even have to work for love. But you’re almost sure it should be easier.
You put your whole heart into every relationship, and you have some scars to show for it.
It’s not that you regret loving, but you wonder if it’s even love sometimes. I mean, all you want is to be seen right? To be loved? Held close at night?
What’s so wrong with that?
Moreover, why does it seem difficult for the ones you want that comfort from to give it to you?
So you figure, like everything else, you’ll work hard for love. You make a five course meal out of scraps.
You hate it, but at least it’s something.
Then the day comes where you discover a love that sets your soul alight. You’ve ‘loved’ so many other people, but this one just feels right. It feels like the first time.
Everything is like a dream until you’re hit with the cold reality that they deserve better. Or so you think.
Letting go hurts, but you do it so you won’t hinder the one you love. You learn sacrifice for the first time.
But nobody asked you to do that. You could’ve stayed if you wanted to. Things would’ve worked out.
But you can’t imagine that because of the lovers before.
Older and wiser. You wistfully think of what could have been. You’ve learned from your mistakes and don’t run from them anymore.
But your desires are the same: to love, be loved and to help and have everyone you love together.
You’ll never give up that dream.
You don’t have to.
[A LETTER TO HER, THAT’S REALLY FOR ME- PART ii]
Part i













