When You Came Back, I Didn’t
You returned with the same love, but I had already learned how to live without it.
You didn’t knock differently.
Same voice.
Same softness.
Same way you said my name
like it still belonged to you.
And for a second,
just a second,
everything rushed back.
The late-night calls.
The laughter that felt like home.
The promises we made
when we still believed
love was enough to make people stay.
You stood there
like time had waited for you.
But it hadn’t waited for me.
While you were gone,
life kept moving.
I learned how to sit with silence
without reaching for my phone.
I learned how to sleep
without replaying your voice in my head.
I learned how to exist
in a world where you were no longer part of it.
Not easily.
Not quickly.
But completely.
And that’s the part
you couldn’t see.
You came back with apologies
I once begged to hear.
With explanations
I once would have held onto like air.
But now,
they felt like echoes.
Familiar,
but distant.
Like hearing a song
that used to break you
and realizing
it’s just a song now.
You looked at me
like you expected something,
like the door you left open
would still lead back to us.
But love doesn’t stay frozen
just because someone leaves.
It changes.
It adapts.
Or sometimes…
it disappears quietly
while you’re learning how to survive without it.
And I did.
I survived you leaving.
I survived missing you.
I survived becoming someone
who no longer needed you to come back.
So when you stood there,
hoping to pick up
where we left off,
I realized something
I never thought I would say:
You came back.
But I didn’t.
About the Creator
Lori A. A.
Writer, Teacher exploring identity, human behavior, and life between cultures.



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