There’s a particular kind of silence that doesn't come from the absence of sound—but from the absence of being noticed.
I started sensing it in passing moments. Someone would ask, “Have we met?” even though we had. I'd smile politely, pretend I hadn’t noticed. Or I’d speak in a group and the conversation would just move on, like my words were smoke that didn’t catch. It's not dramatic. It's not cruel. It just is. Like static. Like walking into a room and not shifting its air.
I don’t think anyone meant to forget me.
I just think I made it easy.
Maybe it was a defense. Maybe if I became nobody in particular, I wouldn’t have to explain the contradictions in me—the softness I kept folding away, the chaos I never learned how to speak, the loneliness I wore like a neutral color. Being undefined was safer than being misunderstood.
But invisibility has its own weight. A quiet grief. You start wondering if your life is happening to someone else. If you’re just borrowing a body to get through the days. If the version of you that’s known by others is a placeholder—blurry, convenient, easily replaced.
Some days I looked in the mirror and felt like a rumor. Other days, I didn’t look at all.
It’s strange, isn’t it? How you can feel so heavy and yet take up no space.
How your voice can echo inside your chest but still not be heard by anyone.
How you can be surrounded by people and still feel like a sketch that was never inked in.
I don’t have a neat ending for this.
Just this: I’m learning that being nobody in particular still means I am.
Even if I’m not seen clearly. Even if I’m not chosen loudly.
Even if the only place I fully exist is in the sentences I write when the world is quiet enough to listen.
Maybe that’s enough.
Maybe that's where I begin.
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