“The deepest pain was never the waiting, it was what waiting made me believe about myself.”
Today, I had a realisation.
Waiting is a trigger for me.
Not because I am impatient.
Not because I cannot tolerate uncertainty.
But because for years, waiting became the language of my pain.
In my married life, I was always waiting.
Waiting for him to notice me.
Waiting for attention.
Waiting for affection.
Waiting to feel chosen.
Waiting to feel important.
Waiting for love that felt just out of reach.
And slowly, without even realizing it, waiting stopped feeling like hope.
It started feeling like abandonment.
Like invisibility.
Like I had to earn love by being patient.
Like if I waited long enough, loved hard enough, gave enough, sacrificed enough, maybe one day I would finally be seen.
But the painful truth I realised today is this:
The waiting itself became a form of disrespect to myself.
Because while I was waiting for someone else to choose me, I unknowingly stopped choosing myself.
I silenced my needs.
I ignored my loneliness.
I abandoned parts of myself hoping someone else would finally turn toward me.
And perhaps that is why waiting triggers me now.
Because my nervous system remembers.
It remembers the ache of longing.
The disappointment.
The hope followed by silence.
The feeling of sitting beside someone yet feeling emotionally alone.
Today, I understand something important:
Waiting is not the trigger.
What waiting represents is.
The fear of not mattering.
The pain of feeling unseen.
The grief of loving someone who could not meet me where I needed them to.
But healing teaches us something different.
I no longer want to wait for permission to feel worthy.
I no longer want to wait for love to prove my value.
I no longer want to wait to choose myself.
Some people wait for someone else to finally see them.
Healing begins the moment we finally see ourselves.
And maybe this season of my life is teaching me this:
I am no longer waiting.
I am returning to myself.
