You are not a rehab center.
You are not a therapist, a savior, or an emotional sponge.
You are a person with needs, limits, and a soul that deserves to feel safe.
When someone you love uses their suffering to justify cruelty, you may feel guilt for leaving. But what you’re leaving is not love—it’s emotional hostage-taking dressed in sympathy.
Real love doesn’t demand that you abandon yourself.
Real love doesn’t make you feel responsible for someone else’s wounds.
Real love does not hurt as proof of its depth.
Their Story Is Not Your Responsibility!
Yes, they were hurt.
Yes, they had a hard childhood.
Yes, life was unfair to them.
And yet—they are still responsible for how they show up now.
You can hold compassion for someone’s pain and still say:
“You don’t get to scream at me.”
“You don’t get to call me names.”
“You don’t get to punish me because you’re scared of being abandoned.”
You can say these things and walk away with your head high.
You are not cold for protecting your peace.
You are not selfish for choosing to stop absorbing someone else’s damage.
You are wise.
Pain Explains, But It Does Not Excuse.
It’s human to want to understand why someone hurt us. Often, their story does make sense. Their anger came from neglect. Their control came from fear. Their silence came from shame. But once we understand the why, we face a critical question:
What now?
Because empathy is not a reason to stay in harm’s way.
Understanding someone’s pain does not mean tolerating the harm they cause.
Pain explains. But it does not excuse.
Some wounded people choose to wound others. There’s a profound difference between someone who says,
“I’m hurting, and I want to be better,”
and someone who says,
“I’m hurting, so I get to treat you however I want.”
The first is on a healing path.
The second is using their pain as a weapon.
These people may never raise a hand to you, but their words will slice.
Their moods will dominate every room.
Their fears will become your burden.
Their trauma will spill into your nervous system and demand that you clean it up.
If you dare to speak your needs, they may say you're ungrateful.
If you ask for kindness, they might accuse you of being selfish.
If you leave, they could say you “gave up on them.”
But the truth is: they gave up on themselves long ago.
They just don’t want to face it.
You cannot heal someone who refuses to look inward. You can support someone who’s struggling. You can hold space for their pain. But you cannot do their inner work for them—and it’s not your responsibility to try.
It is not love to be someone’s emotional landfill.
It is not kindness to let yourself be crushed under their unprocessed trauma.
It is not loyalty to stay in a connection that drains you just because they “need” you.
In fact, staying often enables them to avoid doing the work.
Sometimes, the most loving thing you can do is say,
“I believe in your capacity to heal—but I won’t destroy myself waiting for you to choose it.”<
You Are Allowed to Walk Away
Even if they’re suffering.
Even if they have a tragic past.
Even if they say they need you.
Even if they’re sorry after every explosion.
You are allowed to leave.
You are allowed to choose safety.
You are allowed to say: “My nervous system deserves peace.”
Letting go of someone who refuses to grow is not abandonment.
It’s survival.
It’s dignity.
It’s an act of self-respect.*
You didn't fail them. You chose yourself.
You will likely carry guilt. That’s normal.
You’ll replay conversations in your head. You’ll remember the good moments.
You’ll wonder if you could have said something differently, held on longer, been “stronger” in your compassion.
But strength isn’t about how much pain you can carry.
It’s about knowing when enough is enough.
You didn’t fail them.
You just finally realized:
Love is not meant to feel like self-erasure.
Your Healing is Sacred Too
There is no honor in bleeding for someone who refuses to stop cutting you.
There is no wisdom in shrinking, so someone else can feel more comfortable in their chaos.
There is no “higher path” that involves sacrificing your soul to save someone who won’t meet you halfway.
You can love someone and still leave.
You can grieve the loss and still know it was right.
You can hold empathy and still say “no more.”
Your healing matters.
Your peace matters.
Your life belongs to you.
Choose it. Again and again.
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Thank you for reading. I have decided to come back to Hive after my long vacation. I have plenty of writing on my laptop and cell phone that I look forward to sharing.
I've come back home to my Hive Family. Much love. Can't wait to catch up on reading some of your blogs. xxO
Ana.