I’ve been thinking a lot about the concept of "maturity" lately. Not the kind that comes with crow’s feet or a mortgage. I mean the real kind. The kind that bleeds. The kind that looks at a past mistake—not with shame, but with a quiet, devastating clarity: Ah. That’s why I did that.
There is only the texture of the day. The weight of the coffee cup. The sound of the furnace kicking on. The ache in your lower back from sitting too long. The text message from a friend that makes you laugh out loud.
It is not the silence of loneliness. It is the silence of reckoning . Mature NL - 5130
You cannot reach Marker 5130 without dragging the ghost of who you used to be behind you.
The most mature thing I did this week wasn't handling a crisis. It was turning off the podcast in the car. It was sitting at a red light without checking my phone. It was watching the rain move down the window glass for forty-five seconds, thinking about nothing at all. I’ve been thinking a lot about the concept
Maturity is the slow, painful realization that forgiveness is not about the other person. It never was. Forgiveness is the sharp knife you use to cut the rope you’ve been hanging from.
I have done terrible things by accident. I have done mediocre things on purpose. I have loved people poorly. I have held grudges like they were winning lottery tickets, refusing to cash them in because the fantasy of revenge was sweeter than the reality of release. The kind that bleeds
There is a particular kind of silence that arrives after the children have left, after the promotion that didn’t fix everything, after the divorce papers are signed, or after you finally admit that the life you built feels like a sweater knit for someone else.
I am currently sitting in the wreckage of a suitcase that busted at the zipper. And you know what? I’m not taping it back together.
We spend the first half of our lives collecting. Careers, partners, homes, resentments, accolades, and traumas. We pack them into a suitcase we call "identity." And then, somewhere around the middle (if we are lucky enough to get a middle), the suitcase breaks.