One Of Them Days -
By evening, you have made a quiet art of surviving. You have not burned down the kitchen. You have not said the unforgivable thing. You have answered the emails that truly mattered and let the rest drown. The hours have passed like a long, shallow breath. You sit in the fading light and realize: this is not a failure of character. This is the hidden tax of having a nervous system. A body that remembers every small slight and every old ghost. A mind that sometimes forgets how to translate the world into anything but ache.
So you close your eyes. You let the weight sit beside you instead of on you. And you whisper to the grey hour that will come again—not in surrender, but in worn, tender defiance: Not today. You do not get to keep me. one of them days
Night falls, and you do not solve the day. You do not arrive at a lesson or a breakthrough. You simply outlast it. You brush your teeth. You turn off the lamp. And in that dark, something miraculous and unspoken happens: you trust that tomorrow will be different. Not because you have evidence, but because you have history. You have survived every single one of these days so far. Each one has carried you, like a reluctant river, to another morning. By evening, you have made a quiet art of surviving
The real collapse happens around two in the afternoon. The hour when the soul is supposed to be industrious, but instead feels like a soaked coat. You re-read a sentence three times and still don’t know what it says. You delete a text before sending it, then rewrite it, then delete it again. The small, ordinary machinery of being a person—responding, deciding, hoping—grinds to a halt. You catch yourself staring at nothing. Not meditating. Not resting. Just stopped . You have answered the emails that truly mattered
By mid-morning, the friction finds you. A pen runs out of ink. A reply you were waiting for arrives as a single, clipped word. A stranger’s carelessness—a door left open, a car horn held too long—lands not as an annoyance but as a personal verdict. You start to believe the world is not just happening around you, but to you. The sky, if it’s visible, seems to be holding its breath, waiting for you to fail.
And then comes the cruelest part: the loneliness of it. Because on a good day, pain is a story you can tell. I’m tired because I worked late. I’m sad because of a memory. But on one of these days, there is no reason. No villain. No tragedy. Just a slow, inexplicable leak of meaning. You look for something to blame—the weather, your hormones, the phase of the moon—but the silence only deepens. You are grieving an absence you cannot name.