By prinasieku

You Can See the Pattern… But You Can’t Make Them Leave It

You can see it so clearly.

The pattern. The cycle. The way this is going to end.

You’ve watched it before. Maybe not exactly like this… but close enough to recognize the shape of it.

The same kind of hurt. The same kind of disappointment. The same kind of outcome waiting at the end.

And it frustrates you.

Because to you? It’s obvious.

What they should do. What they should avoid. What they need to change.

You can see the exit. So why can’t they?

So you try to help.

You advise. You explain. You warn.

Sometimes gently. Sometimes… not so gently.

Because in your mind, this isn’t control.

It’s care.

If you could just get them to see what you see, you could save them from the pain.

From the regret. From the repetition.

From learning the hard way.

But they don’t listen.

Or they nod… and still choose differently.

And something in you tightens.

Frustration. Then anger. Then something deeper you don’t always say out loud.

Because it starts to feel like:

“Why won’t you listen to me?” “Why are you choosing this?” “Why are you making it harder than it needs to be?”

And if you stay with that feeling long enough…

There’s something underneath it.

Let’s be honest.

There’s a part of you that isn’t just afraid for them.

You’re afraid of what happens if they don’t need you in that way.

If they choose differently… without your input.

If life shapes them in ways you didn’t guide.

If they become someone you can’t reach the same way anymore.

So holding on tighter starts to feel like love.

Like protection. Like responsibility.

Like: “If I don’t step in… who will?”

But here’s the part that’s harder to sit with:

Seeing the pattern doesn’t give you the right to control the outcome.

Even if you’re right.

Even if you know where it leads.

Even if it hurts to watch.

Because their life is not your responsibility to manage.

It’s theirs to live.

And sometimes… people don’t leave patterns because they haven’t learned what the pattern is trying to teach them yet.

Not because they’re blind.

Not because they’re careless.

But because they’re still in it.

And this is where it gets uncomfortable.

Because you’re not just being asked to trust them.

You’re being asked to let go of control you never actually had.

If you’re really honest…

you can feel it even now.

That urge to step in. To correct. To guide. To fix.

That voice that says: “If I don’t do something, this will go wrong.”

But what if your role isn’t to prevent the lesson?

What if your role is to stay present while they learn it?

That doesn’t mean you stop caring.

It doesn’t mean you go silent.

It doesn’t mean you pretend not to see.

It means you shift.

From controlling… to allowing.

From managing… to trusting.

From holding tightly… to standing nearby.

Because love doesn’t always look like intervention.

Sometimes it looks like restraint.

Sometimes it looks like: letting someone choose, even when you wouldn’t choose that for them.

And that’s terrifying.

Because it feels like you’re letting them walk into pain.

But the truth is…

you were never the one preventing it.

You were just trying to.

And maybe the real work here isn’t learning how to guide them better.

Maybe it’s learning how to release them without feeling like you’re losing them.

Because holding tighter doesn’t guarantee connection.

It just creates tension.

And if you’re honest…

you don’t actually want control.

You want them safe. You want them whole. You want them okay.

But you cannot live their life for them.

You cannot choose for them.

You cannot learn their lessons for them.

You can only love them while they do.

And maybe that’s where this begins.

Not with letting go completely.

But with loosening your grip.

Just enough…

to see what remains when you stop trying to control what was never yours to carry.

By prinasieku

The Illusion of Choice

We talk about choice like it’s freedom — as if life has laid a thousand doors before us and all we have to do is pick one. But the truth is, choices are never that simple. Every choice costs something. Every yes comes with a quiet no. And sometimes, even when it looks like we have options, our soul already knows there’s really only one we can live with.

Because choice isn’t just about what you want.

It’s about what you’re willing to lose to get it.

And that changes everything.

You can choose peace, but it might cost your pride.

You can choose truth, but it might cost your comfort.

You can choose forgiveness, but it might cost your anger — the one thing that’s been keeping you upright.

You can choose faith, but it might cost control.

So yes, we do have choices. But they’re not as wide as we like to think.

The moment you start asking what truly matters — not what feels good, not what looks right, but what aligns with who you are becoming — most options quietly fall away.

That’s when choice stops being about freedom and starts being about alignment.

It stops being about how much you can have, and becomes about what you can live with when everything else is gone.

And in that place of honesty, you start to see it — how every path that leads you closer to peace, integrity, or love always asks something of you. Always requires surrender. Always demands that you trust what you can’t yet see.

Maybe that’s why, deep down, it sometimes feels like there’s only one real choice left — the one that doesn’t destroy you.

The one that may stretch you, cost you, and undo you a little, but somehow still leads you home.

Because in the end, we don’t just live by what we choose.

We live by what we can bear to lose — and what we refuse to trade, no matter how tempting the other doors look.

By prinasieku

When Pain Demands Payback

There’s this thing that happens. When someone hurts you—really hurts you— it’s not always sadness that shows up first.

Sometimes, it’s fire. This unbearable urge to lash out. To hurt them the way they hurt you. To shake something. Break something. Say that one thing that will land like a slap.

And in that moment, it feels like the only way to breathe again. Like if you don’t release it—this rage, this ache—you might explode.

So maybe you do. You say it. You do it. You let it out.

And for a moment… relief. The heavy cloud lifts. The pain shifts. You feel powerful. Not the helpless one anymore.

But then comes the silence. The echo. The guilt. Now you’re not just the one who was hurt— you’re the one who caused hurt too.

And it’s a sickening trade.

People don’t always talk about this part of us. The part that wants payback. That wants someone else to carry the pain for a while. That wants to stop feeling like the victim and start feeling like the one in control.

But that version of control—it lies. Because the pain doesn’t go away. It just changes address. You mail it off to someone else and hope it won’t come back. But it always does. In guilt. In shame. In regret.

And just like that, you’re no longer the wounded. You’ve become the weapon. But even then… it doesn’t heal anything. Only hides the wound deeper.

By prinasieku

Who Even Was That?

There are moments that play back in the mind like a scene someone else acted out. A look. A comment. A tone. A decision that, at the time, felt small—but now feels sharp and out of place. Almost like it came from someone else entirely.

But it didn’t.

It came from a tired version of self.

An overwhelmed version.

Maybe even a hurt one.

And still, there’s that ache that follows after. That uncomfortable thought:

Why did I do that? Who even was that?

It’s strange how quickly regret shows up. Not always loud, but steady.

Not just because of what happened—but because of who might’ve seen it. A stranger in the room. A barista. A driver. A colleague. Someone who caught that version, without context, without a second chance. And just like that, that becomes their memory of who you are.

God forbid there’s a reunion down the road.

An accidental meeting. A mutual friend. A job interview.

And the only thing they remember is that one off day, that one bad moment.

No space for a do-over. No way to explain, That wasn’t me. Not fully.

That’s the part that stings most—knowing it can’t be taken back.

Some call it overthinking. Others call it caring too much. But maybe it’s just being human. Wanting to be someone who leaves gentleness behind, not discomfort. Someone who doesn’t just feel sorry, but wants to grow. Not out of shame—but out of love for the kind of person they’re becoming.

Because truthfully? No one gets it right all the time.

And the goal was never perfection anyway.

The goal is awareness. Softness. That quiet shift toward becoming better—not flawless, just better.

Sometimes that shift looks like choosing silence over sarcasm.

Or stopping mid-sentence when the tone starts to go sharp.

Or forgiving the moment before it hardens into identity.

And even when the cringe is real and the memory lingers—

There’s room to let grace cover what can’t be undone.

So when the guilt gets loud, let grace speak louder: You messed up, yes. But you’re still good. And you’re still growing.

By prinasieku

The Weight You Were Never Meant to Carry

Guilt doesn’t scream. It just sits there. Heavy. Quiet. Always there. Right in your chest. Right in the back of your mind. Like maybe if you’d said something earlier. Maybe if you’d tried harder. Maybe if you were… better.

You keep going over everything. Looking for the moment it slipped. Looking for what you missed. Trying to trace the pain back to you. And maybe you find something. A sentence. A silence. A look. And it becomes the thing. The reason. The proof. “This is why it’s broken. This is why they’re hurting. This is why I can’t let it go.”

But life isn’t that clean. It’s messy and layered and painful. People aren’t made from one thing. They’re made from everything. And maybe you were part of their story, sure. But not all of it. Not the whole weight. Not the full why.

Still… it’s easier, isn’t it? To blame yourself. Because if it’s your fault, then maybe you can fix it. Undo it. Save them. Make it make sense.

But some things can’t be undone. Some healing isn’t yours to do. Even if you love them. Even if it breaks your heart.

And maybe that’s the hardest part. Letting go—not because you’ve stopped caring, but because you finally understand this isn’t your cross to carry.

So, breathe. Put it down. It’s not yours.

You’re allowed to rest. You’re allowed to forgive yourself. You’re allowed to be free.

By prinasieku

The Truth About Jealousy: The Feeling You’re Too Ashamed to Admit

Jealousy. Even just saying the word feels wrong, like it shouldn’t belong to someone “good” or “put-together.” But it does, doesn’t it? It creeps in, twisting its way around your heart in moments you least expect. And before you know it, you’re overwhelmed, a mess of feelings you’re not even sure you understand.

But here’s the thing—jealousy isn’t just about wanting what someone else has. It’s bigger, deeper, and a whole lot messier than that. And until we stop seeing it as just a sign of insecurity or envy, we’ll never truly understand it. Read more “The Truth About Jealousy: The Feeling You’re Too Ashamed to Admit”