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---
title: "What I Gave"
description: "Some things only become clear months later. And once you see them, you cannot unsee them."
pubDate: 2026-04-12
tags: ["reflection", "personal", "healing", "grief", "relationships"]
category: "reflection"
featuredEssay: false
draft: false
---
*by LATTE*
Months later, you start to see things clearly.
Not because the pain fades, though some of it does.
But because distance gives you something that closeness couldn't.
Perspective.
---
And what I see now, looking back, is something I wish I had seen earlier.
Not to change what happened.
But to have protected myself a little better.
---
## What I Left Behind
I gave a lot.
That is not bitterness talking.
That is just what is true.
An RTX 3080.
Half of 128GB of DDR4 RAM.
An i9 server, given back, even though I had traded my own things to get it.
And more than hardware.
Time. Energy. Trust.
The kind of investment that does not come with a receipt.
I gave without keeping score, because that is how I love.
Fully.
Without calculating returns.
---
## What I Received
Silence.
Not the reflective kind that settles into something meaningful.
Just... silence.
No check-in.
No *how are you doing.*
No acknowledgment that any of it even happened.
Not a thank you.
Not a single word in that direction.
---
I think about that sometimes.
Not to be angry about it, though I think I am allowed to be.
But because it says something.
When you give that much to someone, and what comes back is nothing,
not even a message to ask if you are okay,
that tells you something important.
About what the balance actually was.
About how you were held.
---
## The Complicated Part
Here is the thing that makes it harder to talk about.
He is genuinely sweet.
Kind, funny, easy to love when things were good.
And I mean that.
I am not rewriting him into a villain because that would be easier.
He is not a villain.
But there was another side.
When something required effort he did not feel like giving,
he could become someone different.
Suddenly distant.
Suddenly unreachable.
Sitting in a room full of people, headphones in, eyes on his phone,
while everyone around him talked and laughed and connected.
Not because he was having a hard time.
Just because engagement had a cost he did not want to pay in that moment.
That was the arrogance of it.
Not loud or mean.
Just... absent.
Selectively present.
---
## After It Ended
After the breakup, he wanted to stay friends.
And I tried. Because I still cared. Because I am who I am.
We still spent time together.
Did things together.
And I know I did not handle that perfectly either.
But I also know that I never wanted to end things in the first place.
He did not want expectations.
Did not want consequences.
Wanted the closeness without the commitment.
And so that is what he got.
Except, slowly, quietly, it was destroying me.
---
Because he could not say no.
Not directly.
Not clearly.
There was always an excuse.
Always a soft deflection.
Always something that meant *not really* without ever saying it.
And I would have preferred the truth.
Even if it hurt.
Even if my whole world was already collapsing around me,
I would have rather heard it directly
than been left to figure it out myself
while trying to hold everything together.
---
That is the part that still gets to me.
Not the ending.
The vagueness.
---
## Seeing It Too Late
The hardest part is not the loss.
It is realizing, months after, that I was giving even *after* the end.
After everything had already been decided.
After it was already over.
I kept extending care.
I kept giving the benefit of the doubt.
I kept choosing kindness.
And none of it came back.
Not even in the form of basic acknowledgment.
---
Eventually I had to send him away.
Not because I wanted to.
But because I had no other option left.
And even then, even after that,
the demands kept coming.
More requests.
More expectations.
More of me, long after I had already given everything I had.
Meanwhile, he still had things of mine.
That detail matters.
Not because of what they were worth.
But because of what it meant.
He was still taking.
Still asking.
While I was still there, still extending care I should have stopped extending long before.
---
I should have said no earlier.
That is the honest truth.
Not because saying no would have saved the relationship,
it wouldn't have.
But it would have saved me some of what I lost
in the months after it ended.
---
That is the part I wish I had seen earlier.
Not to have loved less.
But to have stopped sooner.
---
## It Is Okay To Name It
For a long time I tried to stay gentle about all of this.
And I still believe that the relationship itself was real.
That the connection mattered.
That love was there, on both sides, in different amounts.
But gentleness does not require you to pretend something did not hurt.
It hurt.
The silence hurt.
The imbalance hurt.
Being kept in something half-open because he could not say *I don't want this*,
that hurt most of all.
And I think it is important to say that out loud.
Not to assign blame.
Not to rewrite history.
But because naming it is part of carrying it honestly.
---
There is a distinction I had to learn.
I am not angry at him.
I am angry at his actions.
Those are not the same thing.
He is someone who struggles: with emotions, with closeness, with staying when things get hard.
His distance was his way of regulating.
Not a verdict on my worth.
Just the limits of what he could carry.
That understanding took time.
But it matters.
Because it means I do not have to make him into something worse than he was just to justify how much it hurt.
---
The relationship did not end because of a fault.
It ended because of a structural mismatch:
in how we each needed closeness,
and in how we each communicated it.
That distinction matters too.
---
## He Was Never Going To Change
I tried to help.
With things that mattered.
With things that were hard for him.
With patience, and time, and presence.
And I mean that sincerely. I tried.
But he did not want to.
That is not a judgment.
That is just what I eventually had to accept.
You cannot want something for someone more than they want it for themselves.
And when you keep trying anyway,
when you keep showing up for someone who has already quietly decided not to,
you are not helping them.
You are just losing pieces of yourself.
---
## What I Know Now
I know what I am worth.
I know what I am capable of giving.
And I know, now, that I deserve to give that to someone who gives back.
Not perfectly.
Not without struggle.
But with presence.
With honesty.
With the basic decency to say *no* when they mean no,
instead of leaving someone else to read between the lines
while their world falls apart.
---
I also know what I do not want.
I do not want someone who is selectively present.
I do not want someone who deflects instead of speaks.
I do not want to build something with someone
who treats effort like an inconvenience.
I know that now.
Clearly.
Without doubt.
---
And the fact that I never received what I needed,
not once, after everything,
is something I am still sitting with.
---
But I am still here.
Still building things.
Still giving warmth, just to different places.
And I know, now, to be a little more careful
about who I build for.
---
I am glad it is over.
That took me a while to say.
But it is true.
---
And somewhere in all of this, I had to write something down just to believe it.
*I am allowed to be myself.*
Not smaller.
Not quieter.
Not less.
Just myself.
And the next person who gets my warmth
will be someone who actually wants that.
All of it.