The Light That Waited
Even in silence, something inside us always whispers — “Try one more time.”

The Light That Waited
By VoiceWithin
There was a time when I stopped believing in morning.
Not just the sunrise — but the idea that anything new could come again. Days folded into nights without distinction. The clock ticked, the calendar turned, but I was nowhere inside them. I woke up only to survive sleep, and slept only to escape the ache of another waking. The world felt like a hallway with no doors.
People called it depression. I called it forgetting.
Forgetting how to hope. How to reach. How to want.
It was a quiet erasure, not an explosion. I didn’t fall. I faded. Friends noticed the silence but mistook it for strength. I had learned to smile without showing my teeth, to speak without saying anything. I became a shadow pretending to be a person.
But deep inside me — behind all the layers of numbness, distraction, and silence — something small stayed alive.
Something I didn’t notice for a long time.
---
I remember one night in particular.
It was raining — not heavily, just a soft, constant tapping on the windows, like fingers trying to remind me that the world was still out there. I was sitting on the kitchen floor, back against the cupboards, knees to my chest, staring at the same cracked tile I had stared at for months.
I hadn't cried in weeks. I couldn't.
That night, I whispered to myself:
"If this is all there is, I don’t think I want it."
And then...
Silence.
The kind that isn’t empty, but too full. The kind that presses into your ribs. I sat in that silence for what felt like an hour, or maybe it was two minutes. And then, without warning or explanation, something stirred.
A warmth. A breath.
A memory.
Of a time when I had laughed so hard I cried. Of the scent of my mother’s scarf. Of the way sunlight feels when it lands on closed eyelids.
I hadn’t asked for those memories. I hadn’t wanted them.
But they came anyway — quiet, uninvited guests knocking gently at the door of my soul.
And with them came something else.
A whisper.
Just a whisper.
"Try again."
---
I didn’t leap up. I didn’t find purpose or clarity. I didn’t write a novel or call a friend. But I stood. Slowly. I rinsed my face with cold water. I poured myself a glass. I walked to the window and watched the rain.
It sounds small. Insignificant, maybe.
But in the language of despair, that moment was a full sentence. A declaration.
I’m still here.
Not because I was strong. Not because I had figured anything out. But because something inside me — maybe soul, maybe stubbornness, maybe grace — refused to vanish. It waited. Through all the silence. Through all the aching.
And when I was ready, it spoke again.
“You’re not done yet.”
---
Since then, I’ve had better days. And I’ve had worse. The darkness still returns from time to time, as shadows do. But it doesn’t scare me the same way. Because I know now that even in the deepest silence, I am not alone.
There is a light that waits for me. Always.
Not above me.
Not ahead of me.
But within me.
It doesn’t shout.
It doesn’t command.
It simply whispers:
"Try again."
---
If you’re reading this, and you’re tired — not just in your body, but in your soul — I won’t tell you it gets better tomorrow. I don’t know your tomorrow.
But I do know this:
There is a part of you that hasn’t given up. You may not feel it. You may not believe it. But it’s there. Waiting.
It doesn’t need a reason.
It doesn’t demand perfection.
It only needs one thing:
That you notice it.
Just once.
Just enough to say:
"Maybe."
And in that maybe,
hope is born again.

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