The love that broke me also built me
The love that broke me also built me đ

The Love That Broke Me Also Built Me
By= Baily khan
It began like all beautiful things doâquietly. A brush of hands, a stolen glance, the kind of laughter that makes you forget your pain for just long enough to wonder if maybe, just maybe, youâve found the right person.
Her name was Elise. She walked into my life during the grayest winter I can remember. The sky seemed to mourn with me that yearâmy father had just passed, and the silence he left in our home was deafening. Then came Elise, with coffee-colored eyes and a voice like hope, and everything changed.
At first, she didnât try to fix me. She just sat in the quiet with me. We'd lie on the carpet and watch the ceiling fan spin, talking about our dreams like they were just around the corner. She made life feel light. Her love wrapped around me like a warm coat, and I wore it proudly.
But love, I would learn, isnât always kind.
What started as comfort slowly turned to codependence. She became the center of my gravity, the one thing I couldnât imagine losing. And in that kind of desperation, I lost pieces of myself. I gave too much, hoping to keep the warmth. She took what I gave without realizing how empty it was making me.
Our arguments became routine, like bad weather patterns we could predict but not stop. I wanted more from herâmore words, more time, more understanding. She wanted freedom, space, breath. And somehow, both our needs felt like betrayals to the other.
The love that had once held me began to crack.
She left in the spring. I remember because the cherry blossoms were blooming along the riverbank where we used to walk. She didnât yell. There were no tears, not from her. Just a quiet, final âI canât do this anymore.â And she was gone.
I shattered.
The days after felt like surviving an earthquake while standing still. Every place reminded me of her. The bookstore on 5th Street, the café with the crooked tables, the park bench where we once danced in the rain. My world became a gallery of ghosts.
I was angryâat her, at myself, at the love that betrayed me. I told myself I would never fall again, that I was done with vulnerability. But pain, Iâve learned, has a funny way of teaching you what joy never can.
Alone, I had to rebuild. I took long walks with no destination. I journaled until the pages bled truth. I reconnected with friends Iâd neglected. I started going to therapyânot for her, but for me. I learned to sit with my own silence again. It was different this timeânot empty, but full of possibility.
And in that silence, I found the truth: Elise didnât break me. My expectations did. My fear of being alone did. My belief that love had to consume me to be realâthat broke me.
But from the ruins, something stronger began to rise. I started to understand myself better. What I wanted, what I needed, what I would never compromise on again. I stopped chasing love and started building a life that could hold it, should it return.
Months passed. Then a year. And one autumn afternoon, as golden leaves fell like slow confetti, I smiled at a stranger in a bookstore. We talked about poetry. Nothing more. But I didnât feel fear. I didnât feel desperation. I felt open.
It was in that moment I realized: the love that broke me also built me. It taught me boundaries. It taught me self-respect. It carved out the hollow places that I needed to fill with my own strength.
I no longer look at love as a rescue, but as a companion. Someone who walks beside you, not someone you lean on so heavily that they buckle. Iâm still healing, always will be. But Iâm proud of my scars. They remind me that I survived. That I grew. That I learned to choose myself.
Elise is part of my story, a chapter etched deep. But the story didnât end with her. It began.
So now, when people ask me about love, I donât say itâs only beautiful. I say itâs transformative. I say itâs a mirror. I say itâs fireâcapable of warmth or ruin, depending on how you hold it.
And I say this: The love that broke me also built me.
And I wouldnât trade that for anything.



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