Confessions of the Aftermath: What I Said, Didn’t Say, and Should Have Said

 

In the days after everything collapsed,
my voice didn’t sound like mine.
It was rehearsed.
Filtered.
Clenched behind my teeth like I was afraid the wrong syllable might ruin me for good.

I said what I thought people wanted to hear.
I avoided what I knew would be used against me.
And in between those two places,
the truth sat quietly,
unspoken.

This isn’t a PR statement.
This isn’t damage control.
This is a confession.


What I Said

I said “sorry”
because it was true—
but also because I was scared of what would happen if I didn’t.

I said “I take responsibility”
because I meant it—
but I didn’t always know how to show it.

I said “I’m still here”
because part of me wanted to disappear—
and needed to remind myself I hadn’t.


What I Didn’t Say

I didn’t say how deeply I was unraveling.
How I couldn’t sleep.
How I feared my name might never mean anything human again.

I didn’t say that I sometimes felt like my body was moving but I wasn’t inside it.
That I couldn’t tell if I was trying to survive the backlash
or punish myself with it.

I didn’t say how ashamed I felt watching my daughter’s name cross my mind,
knowing I wasn’t the man she needed me to be.
I didn’t say how afraid I was
that maybe they were right—
and maybe I really was the monster they painted.


What I Should Have Said

I should have said,

“I don’t need you to forgive me.
I need you to know I’m listening.”

I should have said,

“I was trying to build something magical and I failed spectacularly.”

I should have said,

“This isn’t about optics.
This is about grief.”

I should have said,

“If I’ve hurt you—really hurt you—then I accept the weight of that fully.”

I should have said,

“I don’t expect to be welcomed back.
I expect to earn peace by living differently from here on out.”

But instead I froze.
I wrote half-truths.
I paused before the most important lines.
I edited out the humanity.

READ  Billy Coull branded a ‘sex pest’ after bombarding woman with sexual messages

The Aftermath Is Where You Find Your Real Voice

When the noise dies down
and no one’s watching,
you have to ask yourself:

What was I afraid to say?
What was I afraid they’d see
if I said it?

For me, the answer was simple.

I was afraid they’d see I was scared.
That I didn’t know who I was anymore.
That I wasn’t sure I deserved a future.

But I’m not afraid of that now.

Because silence protects shame.
And I’ve already carried enough of that.


Final Thought

The aftermath doesn’t need more statements.
It needs honesty.

I can’t change what I said.
Or what I didn’t.
But I can keep speaking now—
from this place.
This raw, stripped-down place
where I don’t have to perform the perfect answer.

I’m not trying to speak for sympathy.
I’m just trying to tell the truth
before silence rewrites it again.

ZeroGPT - Free Open AI Detection ToolZeroGPT

33% AI GPT*

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top