By prinasieku

Dark Empathy

Empathy is supposed to be a light—something that softens the hard edges of the world.

It’s what people praise—what crowns you ‘good.’

But even light can burn.

What if it can be something else—something sharper?

What if empathy, in the wrong hands, cuts deeper than hate ever could?

Dark empathy isn’t loud.

It doesn’t scream.

It just… knows.

It knows you well enough to shatter you with a whisper.

It finds the soft spots you thought were hidden and presses—just enough to remind you they’re still there.

The cruelest part? They might not even mean it.

They just see too much.

And once you see it, you can’t unsee it.

You can’t unknow where the cracks are.

And that knowledge—it’s dangerous.

Because when you understand someone that deeply, you hold a power over them.

And power—even when it’s wrapped in care—has a way of turning dark.

Ever been broken without a single raised voice?

Ever looked in the mirror and realized you could do the same?

That’s dark empathy.

By prinasieku

I Am the Stuck

You think you hate me.

But you don’t.

You cling to me.

I’m the weight on your chest when the world says, go.

I’m the voice that tells you, stay right where you are.

I am not laziness.

I am not fear.

I’m older than that.

I’ve been growing inside you with every broken promise you made to yourself.

Every time you swallowed your pain and smiled.

Every night you told yourself tomorrow would be different.

I was there, collecting the pieces you left behind.

You call me stuck.

But I’m protection.

I’m the wall between you and the disappointment you can’t handle again.

I hold you still so you won’t fall.

You think you want to fight me.

But deep down, you’re afraid of who you’ll be without me.

Because moving means risking everything.

And I know—you’re not ready for that.

So I’ll stay.

As long as you let me, I’ll stay.

And with every day you don’t move, I’ll take a little more of you.

Until there’s nothing left but me.

By prinasieku

Some Endings Leave Echoes

Some goodbyes don’t come with closure.

Some losses aren’t loud.

And some endings — even if they weren’t real, even if they lived only in our minds or screens or hearts — still leave us grieving.

We attach.

To people. To stories. To dreams.

We walk with characters, live inside chapters, get entangled in slow burns and unspoken words and quiet sacrifices.

And then… it’s over.

And no one warns you how empty you might feel.

Not because you’re weak.

Not because you’re overreacting.

But because you cared. You felt. You were there. Fully.

We don’t talk enough about this kind of heartbreak.

The kind that comes after finishing something that mattered.

A show. A season of life. A friendship. A hope.

Something that held you. Helped you. Changed you.

And now it’s gone.

And maybe you find yourself lingering in the silence it left.

Scrolling. Rewatching. Waiting.

Not ready to let go — not yet.

Because it wasn’t just a thing you liked.

It was something you loved.

So if you’re feeling that ache —

that strange grief after a story ends, or a chapter closes —

I hope you know this:

You’re not silly. You’re not too much.

You’re deep. And you’re human.

And every time something moves you that deeply, it’s proof that your heart is still soft. Still open. Still alive.

What a gift.

Maybe that’s the real magic:

That we can feel things that weren’t even “real” and still be changed by them.

Still grow. Still heal. Still find pieces of ourselves in the echoes they leave behind.

So take your time.

Grieve the ending.

Sit in the ache.

And when you’re ready…

let something new find you.

Not to replace what you lost —

but to remind you that there’s always more waiting to be felt.

By prinasieku

To Be Human

To be human is to ache and to long.
It is to carry contradictions: strength and softness, faith and doubt, brilliance and brokenness — sometimes all at once.

It’s waking up hopeful, and by evening, questioning everything.
It’s loving people who may never love us the same way back.
It’s fighting for dreams we sometimes don’t believe we deserve.
It’s messing up, apologizing (or not), and trying again.

To be human is to need — not just food or water — but meaning, belonging, connection.
To be held. To be known. To be seen in all our rawness and still not be left.
It’s laughing inappropriately at funerals and crying in the middle of supermarkets.
It’s finding God in unexpected places and still sometimes feeling abandoned by Him.

Being human means we carry invisible weights no one sees, and still show up.
It means we grieve people who are still alive.
It means we bleed from things no one touched.
It means we carry stories that don’t make sense, and wounds that didn’t ask for permission.

And maybe… maybe being human is also about becoming.
Not just who we were born as — but who we choose to be, especially when it’s hard.
It’s forgiving without closure.
It’s staying tender when life wants you to harden.
It’s hoping again even after disappointment.
It’s choosing to break cycles, even though we were raised inside them.

To be human is weighty and wonder-filled.
Not perfect. Not painless. But deeply worth it.
Because somehow, in all the mess and miracle, we get to live this one wild life — as we are.