There are days I wonder why I keep doing this — writing. Not in a dramatic way, but in that low-simmering kind of doubt that creeps in when nothing is working. When the drafts collect dust (like over four years), the plot stutters, and I can’t seem to land a sentence that sounds like me. When the stories I once held close feel unfamiliar, like a language I haven’t spoken in too long.
I tell myself maybe I’ve said all I needed to say.
Maybe the silence isn’t temporary.
Maybe the writing thing is something I outgrew quietly, without noticing.
And yet… something nudges me back. There’s still something asking to be written.
I don’t write because I’m brimming with ideas. I write because it helps me understand the ones that won’t leave me alone. Because the page doesn’t interrupt. It doesn’t look away. It doesn’t ask me to make it pretty before I tell the truth. Writing is how I make sense of the world.
Writing slows the spin. It lets me stay with a thought longer than I normally would.
It gives shape to feelings that tend to live in corners.
And more and more, I find that I’m not writing to prove anything.
Not to justify the time spent or to present myself as interesting or clever.
But to make room. For myself. For what I’m still trying to figure out. For the parts I haven’t spoken aloud yet.
Sometimes I imagine a reader — someone I don’t know who might find a piece of themselves in something I’ve written. But mostly, I write for the girl I once was. The one who never knew what to do with all that feeling. The one who used to say “sorry” before every sentence. The one who still does sometimes. The one who held her breath when someone asked what she did and she longed for the day she would say, “Writer,” with conviction.
I still write for her.
Not because it’s easy, or even because it’s always healing.
But because it’s the one place I don’t have to perform.
Because even when the words feel slow and uncertain, they’re still mine.
And I think that’s enough.
