07/04/2026
There's a quiet, almost invisible kind of hurt in realizing that your presence in someone's life isn't a constant—it's a convenience.
"You only call me when you’re lonely. You never call me at all."
It sounds simple, almost harmless. But beneath those words is a truth that cuts deeper than anger ever could. Because it's never really about the calls—it's about what they reveal. Being remembered only in someone else's emptiness, and forgotten in the fullness of their days.
It makes you question your place.
Were you ever someone they truly wanted, or just someone they reached for when the silence became unbearable?
Real connection doesn't wait for the quiet to arrive.
It lives in the ordinary. In random check-ins, shared laughter, and quiet moments of "I thought of you." It exists not just when life feels empty, but even when it feels whole.
And yet, they don't call.
Not because they can't, but because they choose not to—until the void reminds them of you.
That's when the ache settles in.
Being needed, but never chosen. Being remembered, but never sought. Being someone's patch for loneliness, never the heart that matters.
And somewhere along the way, a realization settles in:
You were never meant to be someone's fallback.
You were meant to be someone's choice.
So maybe this isn’t about them at all. It's about you.
About seeing your own worth clearly enough to stop answering calls born of emptiness, and start waiting—no longer for them, but for the love that finds you when your heart is already full, not just when it aches.