The Door I Never Closed
I stayed until I disappeared

I knew.
I just didnât leave.
Thatâs the part I donât like admitting.
â
There wasnât a moment
where everything suddenly broke,
no single word,
no final betrayal.
â
Just a slow, quiet knowing
that settled in my chest
and never left.
â
I am not naive.
But I stayed.
And that might be worse.
â
I think
I believed love worked like gambling.
â
That if I kept giving more,
and more,
eventually
something would hit.
â
That one day
I would feel it shift,
like a machine finally lighting up,
like all the waiting
had been worth it.
â
So I kept putting pieces of myself in.
â
Another try.
Another chance.
â
Watching closely
for any sign
that you were finally
going to choose me.
â
But nothing ever came.
â
No sudden change.
No moment of clarity.
No jackpot.
â
Just silence,
and almosts,
and the realization
that I was the only one
still playing.
â
I told myself
that meant I cared more.
That meant I loved deeper.
That if I held on
a little longer,
it would finally be enough.
â
But love isnât something
you can win.
â
You can pour everything you have
into someone
and still walk away
empty.
â
You didnât keep me there.
The door was never locked.
â â
I just couldnât stop hoping
that the next moment
would be different
than the last.
â â
So I stayed
and called it patience.
I stayed
and called it love.
â
I stayed
long enough
to lose parts of myself
I didnât notice were gone.
â
Now I stand in the doorway
of everything I lost,
trying to understand
why I kept reaching
for something
that was never reaching back.
â
And the hardest part is
knowing
no matter how much I gave,
I kept betting
like love could make you choose me.
About the Creator
Miss. Anonymousđť
You donât know me,
but you might know these feelings.



Comments (2)
This is painfully relatable. I've definitely been there before. I loved that line about love not being something you win.
Ouch, this is painfully honest⌠in the most beautiful way! The âlove like gamblingâ part?? yeah, thatâs such a real way to describe it. I think the hardest truth in this is realizing it wasnât about not being enough.... it was about giving your heart to someone who was never playing the same game. Hugs. đ