I Thought I Was Still Living
Most people think survival looks dramatic. They imagine catastrophe. Sirens. Breakdowns. Rock bottom. Visible suffering. But survival mode is often much quieter than that. Sometimes it looks like paying bills, going to work, answering texts, smiling at people in grocery stores, making dinner, and folding laundry. Existing so routinely that nobody notices your spirit quietly left the room three years ago. That is the dangerous part. Some people are not collapsing. They are functioning. And functioning can hide an enormous amount of emotional absence. A nervous system trapped in chronic stress, grief, trauma, fear, burnout, or emotional exhaustion does something remarkable and terrifying at the same time: it narrows perception. The brain begins prioritizing endurance over experience. Threat detection over wonder. Adaptation over presence. Energy conservation over emotional connection. Not beauty. Not awe. Not curiosity. Not the warmth of being fully alive inside your own moments. Surviva...