Reading After I Do makes me feel all melancholy.
It’s the sense of familiarity. Holding on to what seem right.
At this point of my life, no one feels familiar anymore, that
it feels unreal to me. And how it saddens me. Maybe one of the reasons why it’s
hard for me to let them go is the fear of not being able to find people like
them again.
Losing the sense of familiarity with your people is already terrifying
and letting them go is a different thing.
Not that it feels necessary to walk away, but losing this particular sense, can draw a bigger gap among people over time.
I remember how her tears instantly streamed down her face
when he apologized, saying he knew he had changed. She wished he didn’t say
that out loud, so she could keep her pretense of not seeing it coming, not
before she readied herself. It truly saddened her, because his words felt like
a goodbye. But she wouldn’t lie, there was actually a sense of relief, which
she didn’t need to pretend anymore.
And how pretending feels like lying.
It’s only natural for us to change.
And change, could never be suppressed, or else, it’s only going
to disperse a gnawing pain all over the body and mind.
Is it okay to hold on to someone just because they give us
the sense of familiarity?
I think yes, considering how it’s a huge contributing factor
that makes people feel cozy among themselves.
I wonder if people feel the same way about me, the way I feel
about them. That we are slowly growing apart, that our values seem to
contradict unlike in past. Things feel like being forced, less meaningful and awkward.
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