When You Feel Like You are Breaking
- DR Neha Sharma

- Jun 25
- 2 min read
I see you. Deeply, truly.
You’ve carried more than anyone could know—fighting silent battles, holding it together when it felt like everything was falling apart. You’ve survived storms that no one witnessed, and showed up for others when no one showed up for you. You became your own anchor, your own light in the dark.
But now, love... you’re tired. And that’s okay.
It’s okay to not be okay.
It’s okay to lay it down for a while.
You don’t need to be the strong one today.
You’re no longer in the battlefield. There’s no more proving, no more chasing. What’s done is done—not because it was perfect, but because it was real. And you were real through it all. That matters more than you know.
You’ve been scared enough. Tough enough. Judged enough.
Now, it’s time—to let others carry some of that weight. To allow support in. To let softness touch the places that have only known armor.
It’s time to open new doors—ones that don’t ask you to perform or pretend, but simply invite you to walk away from what no longer fits, and toward what heals.
You’ve arrived at a place in your life where you don’t have to fear loss for speaking your truth.
You won’t lose the right people by being real. You won't lose anything worth keeping by being imperfect. Because those who stay now… they stay for all of you—not just the polished parts, but the messy, raw, questioning, unfinished pieces too. Imperfection is not your flaw. It’s your freedom. It’s the thread that makes you human, that makes your story one worth reading.
Perfection is a myth that leaves us empty. But your cracks—your realness—that’s what glows in the dark. That’s what makes you you. The ones who love you now aren’t waiting for Cinderella or a happy ending. They know real life rarely looks like that. And they wouldn’t trade your truth for a fairy tale.
So break the rules. Break the silence. Break free from the tags and titles.
You don’t need to be anyone else.
You don’t need to be fixed.
You’re already enough.
You’ve always been.



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