I AM: The Space Between Us
We once moved together like three points held in a quiet orbit. We were children, but we moved like best friends who trusted the world less than we trusted each other. One nudge became shared laughter. A glance carried a full sentence.
Secrets passed in low voices, folded between us and kept safe. We moved through chores and games side by side, inventing rules as we went, creating songs and lyrics no one else could understand. Together, we made a small universe that felt safe and secure.
Every gesture carried meaning, and I registered it before I could explain it. I understood the depth behind a pause, the tilt of a shoulder, and the moment when laughter shifted.
I believed I was responsible for keeping the orbit steady. I stayed alert. I stayed a step ahead. I thought it was my job to absorb whatever strain appeared within the family. I believed that I was the protector.
Time changed the gravity. It was subtle at first, conversations that dwindled. No more shared glances, jokes, or laughter. The orbit loosened. The space between us widened, shaped by choices, beliefs, and silences that hardened over time.
We lived in different places then, not just geographically but internally. Our worlds began to tilt in opposing directions. What we once shared unraveled into incompatible truths. One moved toward certainty that allowed no room for doubt. Another withdrew into a careful, self-contained quiet. I did not withdraw. I did not settle. I spun wildly. I circled in widening arcs, driven by an urgency I could not regulate. My vigilance became frantic, my care unbound by restraint. I tried to force the orbit back into alignment through sheer will and intensity.
“I tried to force the orbit back into alignment through sheer will and intensity.”
Then everything gave way. Not in one clean break, but in the moment I saw how much had been buried for years. The crack exposed the underbelly of our relationships—a tapestry of misunderstandings left unspoken, conversations refused or abandoned, resentments carried quietly and abnormal called normal.
When everything bubbled to the surface, it did not stay between the three of us. It spread through the family like a shockwave. People chose sides. Old dynamics snapped back into place. Silence thickened where care should have been. I felt it in phone calls that stopped coming, in rooms that no longer felt neutral, and in the sudden awareness that I was no longer standing on shared ground. No one paused long enough to name what had broken, and no one was willing to address how long it had been eroding. The orbit could not hold. We separated into our own paths, bodies moving independently, sensing one another only faintly, already too distant to return.
The aftermath hollowed me. The responsibility I had claimed collapsed inward and became an unbearable weight. The loss lodged in my body and refused to move. Days flattened. Nights stretched thin and exposed. What truly unraveled me was the realization that the structure I had depended on was gone. The people I believed anchored me were no longer there, and the safety I assumed was permanent vanished. With it went my sense of footing.
A newfound darkness of familial instability hung like a low, hazy cloud and dragged on for years. I suffocated on sadness and clung to the past, as if it proved something essential had been lost. In that clinging, I carried blame that was never mine and bore wounds I was never meant to carry.
“The orbit could not hold. We separated into our own paths, bodies moving independently, sensing one another only faintly.”
Slowly, something began to shift. Not all at once, and not without resistance. The grief softened. The anger released its grip. I started to see that what I missed was not always what was healthy, but what was familiar, what made sense in another version of time. Maybe protection does not always mean holding on.
The shift, though, is incomplete. Some days I still reach for my phone, then remember the distance. Some days, I resent another’s certainty. Some days, I wonder if I was the problem all along.
We no longer move in the patterns I once thought necessary. Letting go is not abandonment. It is recognition. Each of us must follow our own path. I cannot force alignment, nor should I. What matters now is space, the ability to witness one another honestly, to speak without fear, to be seen fully. Only then can the connection be real.
Standing steady in my own orbit is enough.
I am learning this the hard way. My wounds ran deep, my attempts to protect too desperate. Over time, I have begun to see life differently, though I cannot say I have arrived.
The people I love move according to their own truths. Their choices, their boundaries: these still unsettle me sometimes, but less than before. They show me what it means to respect another’s path, to love without control. Standing steady in my own path is enough. Most days.
We may never be as seamless as we once seemed, but we are real. In the space between, in the distance that no longer threatens as much, I find the freedom to stand steady: to hold the light I carry without trying to dictate the light of others.
I think of those three children who moved like best friends, who trusted each other more than the world. They had no idea what was coming. They believed the orbit would hold forever. It didn’t. But what they built in that small universe still exists somewhere, changed beyond recognition, impossibly distant, and yet somehow still there. Not in the way it was. Not in the way I wanted it to be. But in the way it actually is: fractured, honest, and mine to carry forward. This is what remains. This is what I choose to hold.
