The revolution of smiling for real.
You know what no one tells you?
Sometimes, joy is violent.
Not because it harms.
But because it dares to exist
after everything that should’ve killed it.
There was a time I smiled to survive.
To smooth things over.
To make people comfortable.
To prove I was fine when I was unraveling at the seams.
I mastered the “I’m okay” smile.
The “please don’t leave me” smile.
The “I’ll die if you don’t believe this” smile.
But now?
Now I smile like a weapon.
Like a flag planted on the battlefield I crawled across.
Like I’m telling the past,
“You don’t get to write the ending.”
Because this joy—
this messy, loud, radiant, real-ass joy—
is mine.
Not borrowed.
Not staged.
Not the kind they sell in Hallmark movies.
The kind that shows up like bruised sunlight
through the cracks I once begged to disappear in.
I smile now because I earned it.
Every laugh, every peace-filled morning,
every inside joke that isn’t trauma-soaked—
It’s all a middle finger to the systems, the people, the habits
that once made joy impossible.
I’m not here for palatable healing.
I’m not here to make grief graceful.
I’m here for the joy that makes people uncomfortable.
The kind they didn’t expect me to survive long enough to feel.
The kind that says:
“I’m still f*cking here.
And I’m finally happy.
What now?”
đź§ Emotional Takeaway:
Sometimes, joy is the revenge.
Not petty.
Not performative.
Just proof that you didn’t disappear when they stopped watching.
If your joy feels foreign—let it come slowly.
But when it comes?
Let it stay.
Let it take up space.
Let it scream in color.
🪞 Reflection Box:
I used to think joy was a lie.
A trap.
A thing other people got to feel after they healed better than me.
But now I know—
joy doesn’t wait for perfection.
It just waits for permission.
And I gave it mine.
🎤 I smile now with all my teeth—
No filter, no fear, no pain underneath.
Not the smile I wore to pass the test,
But the one that comes when I choose what’s next.
They tried to crush it, time and again.
But joy’s the part I grew from within.
No stage. No show. No final act—
Just me, alive,
and smiling back.
