Letting go of chaos when peace felt like a threat.
I didn’t miss the high.
I missed the noise.
The spinning. The stories. The emergencies I knew how to survive.
Because I didn’t know who I was
when things were calm.
They say recovery is about letting go of destruction.
But no one tells you what happens
when destruction is where you learned to feel alive.
I didn’t know how to sit still.
I didn’t know how to breathe without bracing.
I didn’t know how to exist without a crisis orbiting me like gravity.
So when things got good—
I sabotaged.
Started fires in the distance just to smell the smoke.
Called old flames I didn’t miss.
Picked fights with people I loved.
Spun problems out of nothing just to feel something.
Not because I was toxic.
But because I was trauma-trained.
Because when the world finally got quiet,
I panicked.
Peace was too loud.
Too still.
Too unfamiliar.
It wasn’t that I loved drama.
It’s that I’d built a home in the explosion.
And moving out meant letting go of the only version of me I ever understood.
But I did it.
I stayed through the boredom.
The slowness.
The awkward silence of not being in crisis.
And I learned—
Peace isn’t the absence of excitement.
It’s the presence of safety.
And I deserve that, too.
🧠Emotional Takeaway:
When chaos is the only love you’ve ever known,
stillness can feel like abandonment.
But that discomfort?
That’s not danger.
That’s the detox.
Stay with it.
Peace will stop feeling like punishment.
And start feeling like home.
🪞 Reflection Box:
I used to think I was addicted to people.
Addicted to substances.
Addicted to the pain.
But really?
I was addicted to patterns.
To adrenaline.
To urgency.
To the false sense of control that came from constantly putting out fires.
Now I light candles instead.
I sit with the quiet.
And I don’t apologize for choosing peace.
Even when it still feels unfamiliar.
🎤 I chased the spark, the scream, the flame—
And told myself it wasn’t shame.
But every fight, and every lie—
Was just a fix to help me hide.
But peace knocked soft. I let it in.
The quiet burned beneath my skin.
Yet here I am, no more facade—
Not bored. Just safe.
And learning God.
