Life, Country and Everything in Between You Were Once Is Gone, Period!

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A small clarity arrived the day I stopped naming the losses as tragedies and began treating them like furniture I no longer needed in the room. I am not speaking of sudden violence or headline grief, but of the slow attrition that erases maps we trusted. The country I carried inside me, the promises whispered by streets and institutions, the version of myself who believed in tidy returns—all of it thinned out and left a different kind of space. I learned to walk through that space without dramatizing the emptiness. Instead of mourning, I cataloged what remained, picked the surfaces that still caught light, and kept the rest intentionally blank. That choice felt like a refusal more than a surrender. It was minimalist by posture and defiant by intent, a refusal to sentimentalize absence into something it never asked to be.

Beyond that first agreement with myself, I reshaped the way I move. I stopped performing belonging and stopped expecting others to supply my sense of place. There is a discipline in that: it reads like austerity but it is not punishment. It is an economy of attention where I spend only on things that return a true weight. Buildings that sag and signs that peel offer a kind of honesty I trust more than any patriotic speech. I listen for texture now, for the way a city breathes when no one is making noise about it. The old instinct to be known by history or to be rescued by memory has loosened. In its stead I keep a quieter ledger, noting what holds and what collapses without the melodrama of blame. This is how I remain practical and present without softening into nostalgia.

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Certain mornings I still wake with a tenderness that could be mistaken for longing. It arrives like sunlight, an accidental warmth that tempts me to recount the past as if it were a series of instructive scenes. I refuse that temptation. Instead I look at the light itself, at what it does to edges and color, and I let the memory be an image rather than a prophecy. In doing this I discovered a sturdier form of grief that does not want attention. It is the private recognition of changes, the sober naming of what no longer answers, and the steady acceptance that some doors did not close because I did not try hard enough but because they belonged to a former geography. My sentences grew shorter. My decisions grew cleaner. Being concise was not a poverty of feeling but an economy of truth.

Deep minimalism, for me, became an ethical stance. I stopped hoarding reasons and started pruning narratives that only made me feel visible. There is a clarity in refusing to be legible to everyone. It is not cruelty; it is allocation. The world will always offer scripts for how loss should be performed, but I choose a script that fits my body. I walk through markets and corners and houses of government with a lightness that unsettles people who still expect spectacle. That discomfort is useful. It reveals who seeks performance and who values presence. My quiet steadiness irritates some and calms others. Either reaction is acceptable. The goal is not to prove anything but to live with fewer props and truer weight.

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Eventually I reached a posture where gratitude and incisions coexist. I am grateful for the clarity that comes when illusions fall away, and I keep the cuts to remind me of what I will not rebuild. The life that remains is more precise, less ornamental, and more honest about limits. I do not romanticize what was lost, nor do I pretend it never mattered. I honor it by refusing to make it the architect of my future. To the readers who want a hymn for what left, I offer this: refuse the easy melancholy. Build with what is sturdy. Let the country you carry be a set of practical tools rather than a shrine. In that way you keep moving, and movement is the most minimalist answer to disappearance that I know.

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All photographs and content used in this post are my own. Therefore, they have been used under my permission and are my property.

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This image belongs to millycf1976 and was manipulated using Canva.

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