Based on Real Life Experience
By Ellis Ambarita
Part I
Solitude, Self-Discovery, and the Woman I Had to Become
There was a version of me who believed love could fix confusion.
I remember her clearly.
She was hopeful. Soft. Patient to a fault. She believed that if she just loved deeply enough, stayed understanding enough, endured quietly enough things would eventually settle into clarity.
She believed in potential more than patterns.
And for a long time, I lived inside that belief.
But growth does not come from comfort.
It comes from friction. From heartbreak. From silence. From the uncomfortable space where excuses can no longer protect you from truth.
This is my life journey not from perfection, but from awareness.
The Woman I Was Before Solitude
I have always been strong in many areas of my life. I can build, manage, survive, strategize. I can carry responsibility. I can think critically. I can lead when needed.
But emotionally?
I was softer than I admitted.
When I loved, I loved fully. I did not play games. I did not calculate. I did not hold back pieces of myself for safety.
If I cared, I showed it.
If I committed, I meant it.
If I stayed, I stayed with loyalty.
But somewhere along the way, I started bending too much.
I started adjusting my expectations so I wouldn’t seem “difficult.”
I accepted unclear answers because I didn’t want to pressure someone.
I silenced my questions because I didn’t want to create conflict.
And slowly almost invisibly I began shrinking.
Not dramatically.
Subtly.
I stopped asking for clarity when I needed it.
I pretended I understood when I didn’t.
I told myself, “Just be patient.”
But patience without boundaries becomes self-abandonment.
And I didn’t realize I was abandoning myself.
The Emotional Roller Coaster I Tried to Normalize
There were days I felt secure.
And there were days I felt like I was standing on unstable ground.
Words would be sweet.
Actions would be inconsistent.
Promises would sound reassuring.
Behavior would create doubt.
That contrast is exhausting.
When someone says they love you but their actions create confusion, your nervous system doesn’t know what to believe.
You start questioning yourself:
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Am I overthinking?
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Am I too sensitive?
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Am I asking for too much?
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Why do I feel anxious if he says he cares?
I remember nights staring at my phone, waiting for replies that took too long. Reading messages twice. Interpreting tone. Looking for reassurance in emojis. Analyzing silence like it was a coded message.
That is not love.
That is hyper-vigilance.
But I convinced myself it was just “complicated.”
I defended him in conversations with friends. I minimized my discomfort. I focused on his potential, not his consistency.
And that is how you slowly disconnect from yourself by prioritizing someone’s future behavior over their present reality.
The Breaking Point
The breaking point was not dramatic.
There was no screaming.
No explosive argument.
Just a quiet realization that I was more anxious than happy.
That realization is heavy.
Because once you see it, you cannot unsee it.
I asked myself a question that changed everything:
“If nothing changes, can I live like this long-term?”
And for the first time, the answer was honest.
No.
That “no” did not come from anger.
It came from exhaustion.
From emotional fatigue.
From constantly trying to interpret someone who should have been clear.
And when things ended, the silence felt terrifying.
Loneliness Before Solitude
At first, I confused solitude with loneliness.
The house felt too quiet.
The absence felt loud.
My hands would instinctively reach for my phone before I remembered there was no one to text.
I missed not only him I missed the emotional rhythm, even if it was chaotic.
I missed the anticipation.
I missed the hope.
But hope tied to uncertainty is draining.
Still, I grieved.
Not just the person.
But the future I imagined.
And that grief is real.
You mourn what could have been.
You mourn the version of yourself who believed.
You mourn the illusion.
But grief is part of growth.
When Solitude Became a Teacher
Something shifted about three weeks into silence.
The panic reduced.
The urgency faded.
My nervous system began calming down.
I slept better.
I stopped checking social media.
I stopped replaying old conversations.
And in that stillness, reflection began.
Solitude gave me space to see clearly without emotional pressure.
Without trying to win.
Without trying to be chosen.
Without trying to fix something that wasn’t mine to fix.
And the clarity was uncomfortable.
The Hard Questions I Had to Ask Myself
Solitude asks questions you cannot avoid.
Why did I accept inconsistency?
Why did I make excuses for unclear behavior?
Why did I chase reassurance from someone who should have offered it naturally?
Was I loving him or trying to prove my worth?
Was I afraid of losing him or afraid of feeling rejected?
The truth was not flattering.
I realized I had confused emotional intensity with emotional depth.
I equated strong feelings with compatibility.
I tolerated mixed signals because I feared starting over.
I accepted less because I believed love required sacrifice.
But healthy love does not require confusion.
That was my awakening.
The Shift From “Am I Enough?” to “Why Did I Accept Less?”
For weeks, my inner dialogue sounded like this:
“Why wasn’t I enough?”
That question carries shame.
It assumes deficiency.
It suggests that if you were better calmer, prettier, quieter, more patient maybe things would have worked.
But one evening, sitting alone, something shifted.
A new question emerged:
“Why did I accept less than I deserved?”
That question changes everything.
It places responsibility back in your hands.
It reminds you that you had choices.
It removes shame and replaces it with awareness.
That moment was transformation.
Because I stopped seeing myself as someone who was rejected.
And started seeing myself as someone who tolerated less than she should have.
Growth Is Emotional Maturity
Growth does not mean becoming cold.
It means becoming clear.
I learned:
Mixed signals are signals.
Inconsistency is information.
Silence is communication.
If someone wants to be with you, they do not create constant doubt.
Emotional maturity means you observe patterns instead of believing promises.
It means you no longer argue with reality.
It means you stop explaining your needs to someone who refuses to meet them.
It means walking away not dramatically but decisively.
And sometimes growth hurts because it raises your standards.
You can no longer unsee what you now understand.
The Parts of Me I Had to Reclaim
I realized I had dimmed parts of myself.
I made myself smaller to avoid appearing demanding.
I delayed conversations to avoid tension.
I overextended empathy.
I excused behavior that did not align with my values.
Solitude gave me those parts back.
I started speaking clearly.
Even in small situations.
I practiced saying, “That doesn’t work for me.”
Without explanation.
Without guilt.
That sentence alone rebuilt my self-respect.
The Role of Reflection and Reading
Books became mirrors.
They explained attachment styles.
They described anxious patterns.
They validated nervous system responses.
But knowledge alone does not heal you.
Application does.
I practiced pausing before reacting.
I waited before responding emotionally.
I stopped sending long explanatory messages.
I let silence exist.
And something powerful happened.
I realized I no longer needed to prove my value.
My energy felt calmer.
More grounded.
Less desperate for validation.
The Nervous System Reset
When you are emotionally unstable, your body knows.
Your heart races.
You overanalyze.
You imagine worst-case scenarios.
You replay conversations.
That is stress, not love.
In solitude, my body softened.
I breathed slower.
I focused on my routines.
I exercised.
I reconnected with work and structure.
Stability outside helped stabilize me inside.
And slowly, peace replaced urgency.
Choosing Myself
Choosing yourself is not selfish.
It is disciplined self-respect.
It is walking away even when your heart still feels something.
It is not chasing someone who is undecided.
It is refusing to compete for basic respect.
It is trusting that clarity is not too much to ask.
Choosing yourself means you would rather be alone than emotionally confused.
And that is power.
The Woman I Am Becoming
I am not perfect.
I still feel deeply.
I still love intensely.
But I love differently now.
I do not chase clarity.
I require it.
I do not beg for reassurance.
I observe consistency.
I do not ignore red flags.
I acknowledge them early.
I no longer ask, “Am I enough?”
I know I am.
If someone cannot meet me where I stand, that does not reduce my worth.
It reveals incompatibility.
And that is okay.
The Truth About Solitude
Solitude did not make me lonely.
It made me stronger.
It forced me to confront patterns.
It taught me emotional regulation.
It strengthened my boundaries.
It rebuilt my self-trust.
And self-trust is everything.
Because once you trust yourself, you stop tolerating what feels wrong.
You stop negotiating your peace.
You stop shrinking.
You stand calmly in your standards.
This Is My Life Journey
My journey is not about blaming anyone.
It is about understanding myself.
It is about recognizing where I overgave.
Where I ignored intuition.
Where I stayed too long.
And choosing differently next time.
Growth is not dramatic.
It is quiet.
It is waking up one day and realizing you no longer feel triggered by what once destabilized you.
It is hearing his name and feeling neutral.
It is remembering without longing.
It is choosing peace without effort.
That is healing.
That is maturity.
That is transformation.
And I am still becoming.
But this time, I am not becoming for love.
I am becoming for myself.
And that is the most powerful love story I have ever lived.
It is about returning to who you were before you started shrinking.
And I am still becoming
but this time, I am becoming for me.
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