Category: Existence

  • Belonging, Measured in Time

    The hardest thing of all is to belong—

    not to a place,

    not to a person,

    but to the moment you’re standing in

    without shrinking yourself to fit it.

    Belonging asks for courage.

    It asks you to stay visible

    when hiding would be easier,

    to plant your feet

    when every instinct tells you

    to keep moving.

    It’s learning how to be here

    without apology.

    The oddest thing of all is time.

    How it slips through your fingers

    even when you’re paying attention.

    How it rushes past the moments

    you’d beg to keep

    and lingers in the ones

    you’re trying to survive.

    Time teaches you too late

    what mattered most.

    It turns now into then

    without asking permission,

    and suddenly you’re holding memories

    instead of people,

    lessons instead of chances.

    Maybe belonging and time

    are tied together—

    maybe we struggle to belong

    because we’re always afraid

    of when.

    When it will change.

    When it will end.

    When it will hurt.

    So we hover at the edges,

    half-in, half-out,

    thinking distance will protect us.

    But all it does

    is make the passing louder.

    The hardest thing of all

    is choosing to belong anyway.

    The oddest thing of all

    is realizing time never waited

    for us to decide.