Hi Hive,
Some days, the toughest thing to carry is not school stress, financial pressure, or even physical exhaustion. It is the invisible weight inside your chest, the guilt, resentment, or regret you pretend is no longer there.
For me, one heavy feeling I still struggle with is regrets. Regret about the moments I stayed quiet when I should have speak up. Regret about opportunities I neglect because I doubted myself. Regret about the times I allowed fear to decide my future instead of courage.
The most painful thing about regret is that it does not always scream. But it sometimes whispers. It follows you silently while you are laughing with friends, working, or trying to enjoy life. It reminds you of the version of yourself you could have been if you had made different choices.
And regret can steal the beauty of your present reality if care is not taken. You can be surrounded by blessings and still feel emotionally trapped in old mistakes.
I have also realized that resentment is another dangerous burden. Sometimes we hold anger toward people who hurt us, abandoned us or disappointed us when we most needed them. We repeatedly replay their actions in our minds, hoping it will stop hurting someday. But life keeps moving on while we are busy holding the pain.
And the truth I am learning is that unforgiveness is heavy. Whether it is toward someone else or yourset, it gradually drains your peace.
So what step am I willing to take?
Right now, I'm learning to forgive myself for not always getting things right. I am learning to stop punishing myself for being human. Because every mistake I made came from the level of understanding, fear, or emotion I had at that moment. So I cannot change yesterday, but I can decide not to destroy today because of it.
I am also learning to release situations I don't have control over anymore. Not because they did not hurt, but because I also deserve peace too.
Though, healing may not happen overnight, but I believe freedom starts the moment you stop carrying what life, and time are already asking you to let go.
Maybe the question is not “Why did this happen to me?”
Maybe the real question is: “Until when will I allow it to stop me from enjoying the life still waiting for me?”
