There’s a question people ask without realizing its weight: What happened to you?
As if the answer could be simple. As if a lifetime of loving, losing, trusting, and breaking could be summarized in a sentence.
The truth is, life changes us. Not all at once, but piece by piece. Through relationships that didn’t last, trust that wasn’t returned, effort that went unseen, and words that never found a safe place to land. Over time, those experiences reshape how we move, how we love, and how open we allow ourselves to be.
Being changed doesn’t mean you failed. It means you felt deeply. It means you showed up. It means you survived things that required you to grow quieter, more careful, more aware.
You may still function, still contribute, still care—while carrying a heart that beats a little softer and a soul that feels heavier with memory. That doesn’t make you less whole. It makes you human.
The version of you that existed before loss may be gone, but what remains is someone wiser, stronger, and still capable of meaning. You don’t owe anyone the old version of yourself. You only owe yourself honesty and compassion.
You’re still here. And that matters more than anything.
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