There are days when everything feels like too muchโand yet, somehow, not enough.
It happened to me on a Tuesday. Not a dramatic day. Not a day marked by grief or chaos. Just a regular Tuesday. I was going through the motionsโreplying to emails, checking off tasks, smiling politely, drinking my tea. The world spun just as it always does.
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But then, somewhere between the noise and the silence, my heart whispered: โWhatโs the point of all this?โ
And suddenly, it hit meโeverything around felt empty. The goals, the accomplishments, the endless strivingโฆ all felt like sandcastles built on the edge of a restless ocean. One wave, and itโs all gone. One breath, and itโs all forgotten.
Have you ever stood in the middle of a crowded room and felt utterly alone?
People laugh, talk, share storiesโvoices blur into each other like a faraway hum. You nod, smile, even laugh a littleโbut you feel like a ghost among the living. Youโre there, but not really there. Their world is spinning, but yours is paused in some slow-motion suspensionโyour heart heavy with something you canโt name.
Thatโs when you knowโyouโve drifted from your own soul.
We live in a world that worships productivity. Weโre taught to chase meaning like a trophyโto find it in titles, milestones, and mapped-out missions. But meaning isnโt a box to check. It isnโt a reward at the end of a finish line.
Itโs a presence. A pulse. A feeling.
It either lives in the heartโor not at all.
Some days, the heart rebels. It refuses to find joy in what used to excite us. It aches for reasons it doesnโt explain. No dramatic tragedy. No clear loss. Just a quiet ache. A spiritual fatigue. A soul thatโs tired of pretending.
We often dismiss this feelingโcall it a mood, a phase, hormones, burnout. But what if itโs none of that? What if itโs the most honest voice weโve been ignoring?
What if your heart is saying:
โThis life youโre buildingโฆ it doesnโt feel like home.โ
Iโve learned something in these moments of quiet unraveling:
Grief doesnโt always come from what happened. Sometimes, it comes from what never did.
From the words we never said.
The pauses we never took.
The truths we swallowed.
The dreams we shelved to be โpractical.โ
The versions of ourselves we left behind to be โacceptable.โ
And the pain that surfaces without cause? Maybe itโs the collective weight of all these invisible losses.
We tell ourselves to keep going. Keep hustling. Keep smiling. But what if what we need isnโt another race to runโwhat if what we need is a stillness? A sacred pause. A moment to come back to ourselves.
Because meaning isnโt out there. Itโs inside.
In a breath taken slowly.
In a conversation that touches the soul.
In doing somethingโnot because it earns applauseโbut because it makes your heart swell with quiet joy.
I still have those days. The ones where the world feels far away. Where people talk and I hear them, but their words donโt drop into my earsโthey just float past, like forgotten echoes. Iโve stopped fighting those days. They are messengers.
They remind me to check in.
Not with the world.
Not with my planner.
But with my own ribcage.
With the heart that lives there.
The one that thuds sometimesโnot out of love or fearโbut out of longing. A longing to be seen. Even by me.
So if you ever feel this wayโlike nothing makes sense, like youโre watching your life from a distanceโdonโt panic.
Itโs not the end. Itโs an invitation.
To slow down.
To feel.
To grieve, even the things you never acknowledged.
To reconnect with your truest selfโthe one who knew what joy meant before the world taught you how to perform it.
Because the most painful kind of emptiness is the one that arrives when weโre most fullโof things that never truly belonged to us.
And the greatest kind of healing?
It starts when we make space for silence. For stillness. For a conversation with our own soul.
Thatโs where meaning lives.
Not in the noise of the world.
But in the quiet whisper of the heart that refuses to lie.




