Today I could see, more clearly than ever, how the pain in my body is woven together with the pain of my childhood.
When the pain flares, it isn’t only my body that reacts. Something much older awakens. Helplessness. Fear. The feeling that something bad could happen at any moment.
As a child, I walked on eggshells. Every room carried the possibility of danger. I learned to read moods before I learned to trust my own. Home was never a place where my nervous system could truly rest.
Some days, I realize I am still walking on eggshells—only now it is around the pain in my body. I listen for every sensation. I brace for the next flare. I wait for the next wave of suffering, just as I once waited for the next emotional storm.
The body remembers what the mind wishes it could forget.
I have spent years talking to the little girl inside me. I tell her that she is loved. I tell her that I will never leave her. I promise that I will stand beside her, no matter what tomorrow brings.
And yet, if I am completely honest, the words do not always reach her.
Not because they are untrue.
But because what she needed was never simply reassurance.
She needed safety.
Even my grandparents, who loved me with all their hearts, could not give her that. Their love was real, but they could not change the world she had to return to. Love could soothe her for a little while, but it could not remove the fear that lived inside the walls of home.
The little girl discovered safety only when she was away from the house. Outside, she could breathe. Outside, her body softened. Outside, she could simply be a child.
But the little girl who felt trapped inside that house never truly left.
She is still there.
Not trapped in the past, but carried forward in the nervous system that learned to survive instead of relax.
Perhaps healing is not about convincing her she is safe with words.
Perhaps healing is patiently sitting beside the place where she is still frozen in time.
No rushing.
No fixing.
No asking her to move before she is ready.
Only staying.
Only loving.
Only becoming the steady presence she searched for all those years ago.
Maybe one day she will believe that the danger has passed.
Until then, I will remain beside her.