
Some days I wake up tired.
Not the kind of tired that sleep fixes.
The kind that feels like I’ve been carrying an invisible weight in my chest, dragging it through every room I walk into.
It’s always there—like a background hum I can’t turn off.
There’s no big trauma. No breaking news moment. Just a slow unraveling.
I forget to reply to messages. Not because I don’t care—because I don’t have the energy to care out loud.
I avoid calls. I put off things that used to feel simple.
I scroll endlessly not to be entertained but to distract myself from the silence that keeps getting louder.
I don’t cry dramatically.
I don’t punch walls or scream into pillows.
My sadness isn’t loud—it’s quiet.
It seeps into the way I pour my coffee, the way I stare at walls, the way I laugh and immediately feel hollow after.
People don’t notice because I show up. I smile when I need to. I say “I’m good” out of muscle memory.
I just don’t feel like I’m fully here.
And that disconnection? That’s the part that scares me.
---
Some days I sit in the shower too long.
Not crying. Not thinking. Just… existing under hot water like it might rinse the weight off me.
Other days I clean the whole room obsessively—not because I feel good, but because it’s the only thing I can control.
That’s the pattern: numb, overstimulated, exhausted, then repeat.
It’s chaos that doesn’t look like chaos.
It’s a storm in slow motion.
It’s smiling with tired eyes and no one asking why.
---
People say “talk to someone,” and I want to.
I do.
But even putting it into words feels like work.
And sometimes, silence feels easier than trying to make my feelings sound logical.
This isn’t a story about healing.
There’s no big lesson.
No breakthrough.
Just honesty.
The kind I’ve been scared to say out loud.
---
If this is you too, I don’t have advice.
But I see you.
Sometimes surviving the day is enough.
Sometimes chaos doesn’t roar.
Sometimes it whispers.
And sometimes… we whisper back.
---
Let me know if you want to post this as a Dark Whispers entry, need graphic support, or want it turned into a spoken piece or reel. This is the raw kind of real people connect with most.🖤
And the thing is…
Sometimes I believe it for a second.
Until the silence reminds me I’m not.
---
I call it soft chaos because nothing around me is visibly broken.
The dishes are mostly done.
The bills are paid.
I even post on social media sometimes.
But inside? It’s a slow-motion disaster.
Thoughts pile up like unopened mail.
Feelings I haven’t processed knock against each other like clutter in a small room.
There’s no one big reason.
Just a million small ones that I can’t explain without sounding dramatic or ungrateful.
---
Some nights I stare at the ceiling and wonder if I’m disappointing people just by existing like this—muted, low-energy, half-there.
I cancel plans and feel relieved, then guilty.
I don’t talk about it because I’m afraid of being misunderstood. Or worse—pitied.
So I write things I never send.
I play the same songs on repeat because they feel like company.
I romanticize coffee shops and rainy days, not because I’m poetic, but because it helps me pretend that maybe this fog is aesthetic, not debilitating.
---
No one teaches you how to survive a sadness that doesn’t have a name.
It’s not depression.
It’s not grief.
It’s something in between.
A soft collapse.
I can still function.
About the Creator
Soul Scribbles
Welcome to my public therapy journal—grab a snack.
Writing the things we’re all feeling but don’t always say.
Think of this as your favorite late-night vent session, with a side of me too
The mind, a reservoir that takes in a lot



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