Month: January 2026

  • Time doesn’t rewrite who we are, it reveals it. Through loss, change, and quiet recalibration, perspective shifts from certainty to clarity, and life becomes less about milestones and more about alignment.

    When Certainty Fades, Clarity Appears
  • My first computer wasn’t powerful or impressive, but it was mine. A Tiny PC became my entry point into curiosity, learning by doing, and a lifelong fascination with technology that never really faded.

    A Tiny PC and a Lifetime of Curiosity
  • Healing didn’t come from time passing. It came from working through chaos in my own way. Writing grounded me, reflection clarified the truth, and ChatGPT acted as a mirror when my mind felt too overwhelmed to steady itself.

    Part 8 — Tools
  • We like to think we’re tolerant, but we rarely are. Blaming migrants, benefit claimants, and minorities is easier than facing the systems and people truly responsible for the mess we’re in. While we argue sideways, they keep laughing anyway.

    The Comfort of Blaming Others
  • As I’ve grown older and more aware, my relationship with online communication has shifted toward intentional anonymity. I share less publicly, not out of fear, but out of clarity—choosing boundaries over visibility, presence over performance, and expression without exposure.

    Communicating by Saying Less
  • Integration didn’t come with a breakthrough. It arrived quietly, in the moments when I realised I could remember without hurting, reflect without spiralling, and look at the past without being dragged back into it. I wasn’t rewriting the story anymore…

    Part 7 — Integration
  • The poem explores the struggle of finding hope in a bleak world, where well-meaning reassurances feel insubstantial. It highlights the difficulty of facing one’s emotions and the nuanced experience of being neither fully healed nor lost, but instead existing in…

    It’ll Be OK
  • We’re taught that family relationships are sacred, that blood outranks behaviour, and that walking away is a moral failure. I don’t believe that anymore. Estrangement wasn’t my first choice; it was my last. It came after forgiveness, restraint, and repeated…

    Family Isn’t Sacred by Default
  • Breakups, especially involving infidelity, can create barriers to new relationships, leading to feelings of inadequacy and distrust. When a partner attempts to redefine your past, it exposes their flaws rather than diminishing your worth. True healing requires recognizing your value…

    Standing Where I Was Meant to Stand
  • I’ve found it important to keep my eyes on the future, while still giving the past the space it deserves. I try to learn from my mistakes without getting stuck in them, because that’s where the real growth happens. Every…

    You Have to Look Backwards to Move Forwards.
  • The grief changed long before I noticed it. It stopped dragging me backwards and instead became something I could simply acknowledge — a quiet sadness for what was once real, without any desire to return to it. This was the…

    Part 6 — Clean Grief
  • Healing after an abusive relationship isn’t about acceptance or insight. It’s about remembering who you were before, reclaiming the parts of yourself they tried to erase, and living outward again—not for them, not to spite them, but in spite of…

    In Spite of Them