It feels like I am cursed to live inside a body that betrays me at every turn. Emotional dysregulation isn’t just “mood swings” or being “too sensitive.” It’s violence from within. A storm I never chose that tears through me without warning, leaving destruction in its wake.
One moment I am fine. Breathing. Surviving. The next, I am consumed. Rage, grief, despair — emotions that don’t trickle in, but flood me, drown me, drag me under. There is no pause button. No control. Only the crash.
People see the outburst, the breakdown, the silence that follows. They don’t see the terror. They don’t see the way I can feel myself unraveling in real time, like skin splitting open at the seams, powerless to stop it.
And when it passes — because it always passes — I am left with the ruins. The guilt. The shame. The voices that gnaw at me: You ruined it again. You destroyed everything again. You’ll always be too much, too broken.
It’s a cycle I can’t escape. A pendulum swinging between fire and emptiness. Between being consumed by emotions that feel too big for my body and being left hollow when they finally burn themselves out.
They call it dysregulation.
I call it being at war with myself.
And some days, I wonder which part of me will win — the storm or the silence.
I don’t mean that in a dramatic, attention-seeking way. It’s just… there are people who seem to glide through life with ease — who laugh without effort, who wake up without dread, who find peace in the simplest things. And then there’s me, constantly trying to piece together fragments of myself that never quite fit.
I’ve spent so long chasing happiness like it’s a finish line — something I could reach if I just worked hard enough, healed deep enough, or loved fully enough. But every time I get close, it slips through my fingers. Maybe happiness was never meant to stay. Maybe it’s supposed to be fleeting, just enough to remind me I’m still human before it fades back into the fog.
Sometimes I wonder if my life is more about endurance than joy — surviving the weight, carrying the ache, learning to live with the quiet ache of “almost.” Maybe that’s okay. Maybe my story isn’t about finding happiness, but about learning how to exist without it.
There’s a strange peace in that thought — not comfort, but acceptance. The kind that whispers, you’re still here, and maybe that’s enough.
It’s strange what happens when someone really sees you.
Not the version you’ve practiced, not the one that smiles on cue or says, “I’m fine,” even when you’re falling apart — but the real you. The one you keep hidden behind sarcasm, behind busyness, behind the stories you tell to keep people from asking too many questions.
Being seen feels terrifying at first.
Because it means someone is looking past the armor you’ve spent years building. It means your flaws are showing, your scars are visible, and the truth you’ve tried so hard to bury is standing in the open, trembling in the light.
But it’s also freeing.
Because when someone looks at you and doesn’t turn away — when they stay, even after seeing the cracks — it changes something inside you.
You start to believe maybe you’re not too much.
Maybe you don’t have to hide to be loved.
Being seen isn’t about attention; it’s about being understood.
It’s when someone looks at you and doesn’t just see the surface — they see the story. The pain. The strength. The fight it took to still be here.