(These posts are not about me, just my writing style, but I hope it relates)
I was spiraling over a text one night, replaying the same three sentences until they stopped meaning anything, when my roommate walked in and dropped her bag by the door. She didn't ask what was wrong. She just started making tea in the kitchen, existing nearby, humming something off key. The loop in my head broke before either of us said a word. I hadn't wanted advice. I definitely hadn't wanted a solution, since there wasn't really a problem to solve, just a thought that wouldn't stop circling. What I'd wanted, without being able to name it, was for someone else to just be there while I had it. Being alone with a painful thought is a strange kind of trap. It replays the same conversation from six different angles, invents worst-case scenarios with disturbing creativity, and slowly convinces me the whole situation is bigger than it actually is. Perspective is hard to hold onto by yourself, mostly because there's no outside reference point to bump up against. A calm person in the room does something a racing mind can't do for itself. Their steadiness becomes something to measure my own thoughts against, and the loop tends to lose its grip once it has to compete with an actual, present, unbothered human. I used to think wanting someone there this badly meant something was wrong with me, some deficiency in my ability to just handle things alone. I don't think that anymore. For most of human history, being separated from other people during a threat was genuinely dangerous, and some old, deep part of every one of us still runs on that math. A safe person nearby tells something ancient in the body that the danger, whatever shape it currently takes, is survivable. That instinct is just very old wiring doing exactly what it was built to do, not a character flaw. Here's the part worth sitting with, though. Sometimes what feels like a desperate need for one specific person is actually a need for something that person happens to represent, safety, acceptance, the sense of being genuinely understood. Those feelings got attached to a face at some point, usually because that person provided them first or most often. But the feelings themselves were never actually exclusive to them. A different calm, caring person can meet the same need, even if it doesn't feel that way in the moment the craving hits. I've caught myself aching for a specific person during a hard week, only to realize afterward that a phone call with someone else entirely, someone steady and kind, had done exactly the same job. The ache had been pointing at a person. What it actually wanted was a feeling that person had once reliably provided, and that feeling turned out to be more portable than I'd assumed. This distinction matters, especially when the specific person being craved has become unavailable, no longer good for you, or gone entirely. The longing can feel unbearably specific in the moment, when what's actually underneath it is usually more general, and more findable, than it seems at 2am. If you've been craving someone's presence lately, wanting to be in a room with a person instead of alone with your own thoughts, that means you're human, running on the same old instinct every person before you has run on, not broken or incapable of standing on your own. Connection is one of the actual mechanisms of survival, not a luxury item bolted onto it, quietly working the way it was always supposed to.