The
Weight of What Cannot Change.
I am
fifty-two years old, and I live in reverse.
Not
literally. The calendar still moves forward, my hair still grays, my joints
still ache. But inside, I keep replaying the same moment as if I could force it
to run backward until it undoes itself.
They
call that regret. I call it my second home.
People
like to say time heals everything. Those people have never done something they
cannot take back.
The Day I Would Rewind
It was
summer, one of those heavy days when the air feels thick enough to drink. I was
burning with the kind of rage that makes you feel righteous even when you are
wrong.
I said
things, sharp things, words I had stored for years like poison in a bottle. I
did not just open the bottle. I poured it straight into someone’s open wounds.
The
face I remember is not from the fight, but from the morning after. Quiet.
Blank. Drained of trust.
They
did not say much when they left. But I remember the sound of the door. It did
not slam. It clicked, soft and final.
That
was twenty-two years ago.
When Rain Meant Forward
In my
twenties, rain was just weather. Something to run through. Something to dance
in if you were lucky enough to be in love.
Now I
sit by the window and imagine it in reverse. Droplets lifting from the
pavement, rising into the sky, erasing every wet mark they left behind. Streets
drying without heat. Puddles emptying into the air.
That is
what I want. Not for the rain, but for me.
*The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien offers a quiet, haunting reflection on the burdens we never truly lay down. Read it here
Living With a Ghost That Breathes Like You Do
The
hardest part of regret is not the memory. It is the way it moves in, learning
your routines, eating at the same table, waking when you do.
Some
days I almost forget it exists. I work, I shop, I answer polite questions with
polite lies. Then a coat in a shop window or the slope of someone’s handwriting
appears and it is back in the room, as if it never left.
I have
built my life to make sure I never cause that kind of damage again, but that
does not erase the first time.
People Do Not See the Rain Inside You
If you
have lived long enough, you learn how to hide the storms. At the office, I am
dependable. Among friends, I am the one who remembers birthdays, who offers
rides, who asks about their children.
They do
not see the nights I sit in the dark replaying words I wish I could bury. They
do not hear the conversations I rehearse but will never speak.
We all
have weather inside us. Mine has been raining for decades.
Trying to Turn the Sky Around
Every
self-help book says the same thing: acceptance, forgiveness, moving on. I have
read them all, underlined their best lines.
But in
the quiet, I go back to that impossible image, convincing the rain to fall
backwards.
I
imagine closing my mouth before the first cruel word escapes. I imagine their
face staying soft instead of hardening. I imagine a door that never needed to
close.
That is
the dangerous thing about regret. It teaches you to be a better person too late
for the one you hurt.
What
Time Still Offers Me
I
cannot reverse the rain. But I have learned to stand in it differently.
I
apologize faster now. I pause when my anger tries to dress as truth. I choose
silence over words that would echo for decades.
And
sometimes I write letters I will never send, not to beg for return but to
acknowledge the hurt, to keep myself from pretending it did not happen.
Maybe
that is the closest we get to falling rain in reverse: not undoing the past,
but refusing to repeat it.
The Storm Will Pass, But Not All of It
I will
carry this until my last breath. It is not a weight you put down. It is one you
shift so you can keep moving.
On some
mornings the rain outside matches the rain inside. On those days I let it wash
over the years between then and now. I remember both the damage and the lesson.
And I tell myself that maybe the rain does not need to fall backwards for me to live forward. The past will never give me back what I lost, but it has already taught me how never to lose the same way again.
Thanks for reading. Written by Jon from ClickWorldDaily
I write stories for those who feel things deeply, but quietly.
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Further Reading: Echoes That Refused to Fade
- Somewhere in You, a Man Kept Fixing a Bike That Never Worked
Some inherit tools. Others inherit the silence behind them.
The Ones Who Tried and Disappeared
Not every act of courage is witnessed. Some vanish, but their echoes remain.She Ironed His Uniform, Then Folded the Years
Some stories of loyalty and sacrifice remain unspoken, tucked away with what’s left behind.
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And I tell myself that maybe the rain does not need to fall backwards for me to live forward. The past will never give me back what I lost, but it has already taught me how never to lose the same way again.
ReplyDeletethis verse (sentence) even the whole post touch my heart! Thanks.
Shakil, it means a lot to know those words reached you.
DeleteSome truths settle in quietly, but stay for years-
I’m grateful this one found a place with you.