The Door I Keep Trying to Open
A confession about loving someone when your inner world has always been locked away
There is a door inside me
that has been closed for so long
It has its own weather.
A quiet climate of caution,
a temperature calibrated by years of learning
that my thoughts — the truest ones —
are safer when kept close,
held like warm stones in my palms,
never handed over to someone
who might misunderstand their weight.
I grew up believing my mind was the only place
I could live without being misread.
So I built a home there.
A sanctuary.
A fortress.
A room with no windows
and a lock I learned to turn
without even thinking.
People have asked to enter before,
but they knocked with clumsy hands,
Or they barged in without listening,
Or they rearranged the furniture
and called it love.
So I learned to keep the door shut.
To guard the threshold.
To protect the one thing
that has always been mine.
And then you came.
Not with force.
Not with entitlement.
But with a patience that unsettles me,
a softness that feels like a question
I don’t know how to answer.
You stand on the other side of the door
as if you’ve always known it was there,
as if you can feel the heat of my thoughts
through the wood.
You don’t push.
You don’t pry.
You just wait —
And somehow that is harder.
Because now the door is not just a door.
It is a choice.
A risk.
A trembling hinge between the life I’ve mastered
and the one I’m afraid to want.
I tell myself I’m independent.
That I don’t need to be known
to be loved.
That silence is safer
than the possibility of being misunderstood.
But the truth is quieter and more dangerous:
I don’t know how to let someone
hold the parts of me
I’ve only ever held alone.
Some nights, I feel the wanting rise
like a tide against the door.
A soft pressure.
A reminder that connection
is not the enemy I once believed it to be.
I imagine opening it —
just a crack —
letting you see the shadows,
the unpolished thoughts,
the fears that still sleep under my ribs.
But then the old reflex returns.
Control.
Distance.
The instinct to protect what is sacred
by keeping it untouched.
I close the door again
even when I don’t want to.
Even when I feel you step back
just an inch,
not out of frustration
but out of respect —
and somehow that respect
hurts more than rejection.
Because I know what distance can become.
I know how silence teaches silence,
how withholding becomes a habit,
how a closed door can look like disinterest
to someone who has never lived behind one.
And I know this, too:
I am capable of losing the best thing
that has ever happened to me
simply by trying too hard
not to lose myself.
There is a fine line
between privacy and fear,
between sacredness and sabotage.
Some truths are meant to be spoken.
Some are meant to be held.
And I am still learning
which is which.
But I am trying.
I am learning to place my hand on the doorknob
and breathe through the tremor.
To trust that you won’t take my thoughts
and twist them into something they’re not.
To believe that you can hold my darkness
without making it your burden.
To understand that letting you in
does not mean losing the room I built —
it means letting the air circulate,
letting the light shift,
letting the space become something
we can share without erasing its history.
Maybe the door will never swing open
all at once.
Maybe it will always creak,
always hesitate,
always require a moment of courage
I have to rediscover each time.
But I am learning this:
love is not the force
that breaks the door down.
It is the presence
that waits on the other side,
steady and unafraid,
until I am ready
to turn the key.
And I am readying myself.
Slowly.
Honestly.
With the kind of trembling devotion
that feels like truth.
The door is still mine.
But so is the choice
to open it.
About the Creator
Shannon Lemire
Writing is a part of who I am.
I go back and forth between handwritten lengthy journaling and sitting here glued to my laptop.
As inspiration hits, I write and follow the intuitive nudge.
You'll see many sides of me here.
I hope you enjoy.


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