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Showing posts from October, 2025

The myth of being yourself--- the identity we create vs. the one we live

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The Myth of “Being Yourself”: The Identity We Create vs. the One We Live      “Just be yourself.” It’s one of the most comforting lies we’re told. Not because it’s cruel—but because it assumes there is a single, stable “self” waiting patiently inside us, fully formed, untouched by fear, survival, or expectation. As if identity is something you discover, not something you negotiate with every single day. But what if “being yourself” is not a destination? What if it’s a contradiction? The Self We Create From the moment we become aware of being watched, we begin to edit. Psychology tells us this is normal. The human brain is wired for belonging. We learn quickly which versions of us are rewarded and which are quietly rejected. Smiles earn approval. Silence avoids conflict. Confidence hides insecurity. Over time, these adjustments harden into personality. Carl Jung called this the persona —the mask we wear to function in society. Not a lie, exactly, but not the whole tr...

Time Does Not Heal ---it rewrites

Time Does Not Heal ---it rewrites how memory changes the truth They say time heals all wounds. But that’s the kind of saying people whisper when they don’t know what else to say—when silence feels too heavy, when grief is too big to fit into language. It sounds comforting, almost merciful. But deep down, if you’ve ever really lost something—someone—you know it isn’t true. Time doesn’t heal. It edits. It rewrites. It rearranges the story so you can keep living in it. At first, time feels like distance—like standing on the shore of something that once drowned you. You believe that as the years stretch out, the water will recede, that one day you’ll stand on dry ground again. But that’s not what happens. The tide doesn’t disappear; it just changes shape. It becomes fog, mist, rain—softer, yes, but still there, still clinging to everything you touch. Time does not heal. It mutates. It alters the texture of memory until it becomes something else entirely. We grow up believing that grie...

Why we Love what Hurts us

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  Why we love what hurts us {By Letters to the Moon} --- Introduction: The Paradox of Human Desire We always say we want peace, love, and happiness — yet we find ourselves drawn to the very things that wound us. We chase storms disguised as people, cling to patterns that destroy us, and keep reopening wounds just to feel the sting again. It’s not because we enjoy pain — it’s because pain, in some strange way, feels familiar. It feels real. The truth is: we love what hurts because it reminds us we’re still alive. In a world numbed by routine, silence, and artificial comfort, pain becomes proof of existence — something raw, something that bleeds and therefore breathes. And so, without realizing it, we fall in love not with joy, but with the ache that follows it. The Psychology of Pain and Attachment Pain isn’t random — it’s ritual. The brain is wired to associate intensity with meaning. When something makes us feel deeply — whether through love, anger, or loss — it creates a neural i...

WE DON'T WANT PEACE

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We don't want peace---- we want familiar chaos-----patterns,comfort and mind traps By Letters to the Moon Introduction: The Lie We Tell Ourselves About Peace Peace is the dream we romanticize, the destination every self-help book promises, and the illusion we all chase. But if we are being honest — brutally, painfully honest — peace doesn’t attract us the way chaos does. We don’t crave stillness; we crave noise that feels like home. We don’t seek serenity; we seek what we know — the same arguments, the same fears, the same heartbreaks, the same loops of overthinking that we secretly call comfort. Because peace is foreign. Chaos feels familiar. And familiarity, no matter how destructive, often feels safer than the unknown calm that might force us to confront who we truly are when the noise stops. The Psychology of Familiar Chaos Our minds are addicts — not to drama, but to pattern. Every thought, reaction, or emotion becomes a loop the brain repeats because it recognizes it. The min...

Dear Past, I Forgive You

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    Dear Past, I Forgive You Dear Past, I’ve carried you on my back for so long. Like a bag full of rocks, heavy and unrelenting, weighing me down with every step. Sometimes I thought I’d collapse under the weight of all your memories — the good, the bad, the ones that still wake me up at 3 a.m. in a rush of shame or longing. But today, for once, I want to write to you. Not to curse you. Not to question you. But to say something I never thought I could: I forgive you. The Wounds You Left You weren’t gentle with me. You carved your lessons into my skin like scars, reminders of where I stumbled and fell. You made me trust the wrong people, love without being loved back, give pieces of myself I never got returned. You let me believe I wasn’t enough. You made me stand in mirrors and pick apart every flaw. You let me cry into pillows no one saw, scream into the silence that never answered back. And for years, I hated you for it. I hated the way you shaped me into someone who walks ...

"Echoes of Me in Every Line"

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Echoes of Me in Every Line There’s something haunting about words. Once you write them, they stop belonging only to you. They become echoes — faint, trembling pieces of your truth that linger long after the ink has dried or the screen has dimmed. And yet, every time I write, I can’t help but leave pieces of myself behind. In every line, every pause, every metaphor, there is me — hidden, disguised, but still present. Maybe you won’t see it. Maybe you’ll read these words and think they’re about something else. But I know the truth: they’re always about me. Writing as a Mirror People say writing is storytelling, but for me, it’s confession. A mirror I can’t look away from. A way of saying things I could never speak aloud. When my throat tightens and my voice fails, my pen whispers for me. Every line I write carries an echo of my fears, my regrets, my heartbreaks. Sometimes the echo is soft, disguised in pretty words and metaphors. Sometimes it’s raw and sharp, impossible to hide. The iron...

"The Night Knows My Name"

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The Night Knows My Name The world thinks I’m quiet, but the night knows the truth. It has heard me cry when no one else was listening. It has held my secrets in its vast darkness, swallowing every whispered confession I was too afraid to say aloud. It has seen me break, unravel, and rebuild — all in silence. The night knows my name, not because I called it, but because it has been the only one who stayed. When the World Sleeps There’s a certain loneliness in being awake when everyone else is sleeping. The streets fall silent, the houses dim, the constant hum of life slows to a pause. And yet, inside me, everything is louder. Thoughts I can ignore during the day come alive at night. They stretch their arms, make themselves comfortable, and refuse to leave. Regrets, fears, desires — they all crawl out of the shadows. But instead of drowning me, the night holds them. It doesn’t ask questions. It doesn’t judge. It just stays, patient, as if saying: Give it to me. I can take it. And so I do...

"A Sky Full of Secrets"

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  A Sky Full of Secrets There’s a sky tonight that feels heavier than usual. Not with clouds, not with storms, not with rain. But with secrets. Invisible ones, stretched across the horizon, hidden in the fading light and the first whispers of stars. It’s as if the universe itself holds a thousand untold stories, and I can feel each one pressing against my chest. And maybe that’s what tonight feels like for me too — a sky full of secrets, each one mine, each one unspoken, yet impossible to ignore. The Weight of Unsaid Words Somewhere along the way, I learned that not all words are meant to be spoken. Some are too sharp, too heavy, too raw. So they linger in the corners of my mind, bouncing off walls no one else can see. I’ve carried apologies I never gave. Confessions I never spoke. Dreams I never shared. And though I wanted to release them, I never did. The sky seems to understand. Its vastness offers room for every hidden thought, every quiet regret. It doesn’t demand answers or e...

"I’m Surrounded, But I’ve Never Felt More Alone"

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  I’m Surrounded, But I’ve Never Felt More Alone I look around me and see faces, voices, laughter, movement. People are talking, smiling, living, and I am here. Quiet. Watching. Feeling a chasm I can’t explain. It’s ironic, isn’t it? To be in the midst of warmth, yet feel a coldness so profound it almost hurts. Surrounded by presence, but utterly, painfully alone. The Crowd Doesn’t Understand People often mistake being among others as a cure for loneliness. They think conversations, noise, and proximity will fill the hollow space inside. But the hollow doesn’t fill. It expands. Even with friends around, even when surrounded by love, I feel like a ghost drifting among the living. I nod, I laugh, I respond appropriately. I perform the motions of engagement. But no one sees the space I inhabit — the quiet void between me and the rest of the world. No one notices how I hear the words but don’t truly listen. How I smile but my mind is elsewhere. How I am physically here, but emotionally...