Humans logo

🩹 The Wound That Didn’t Bleed

Some pain doesn’t show on skin. It shows in silence.

By DR. Allama iqbalPublished 7 months ago • 3 min read
Some pain doesn’t show on skin. It shows in silence.

🌪 A Boy Who Stopped Talking

Ali was 8 years old when the noise in his house became a storm.

His father, once calm, had begun shouting over everything — broken plates, unfinished homework, the wrong answer, or simply nothing at all. His mother, tired of the shouting, shouted back. And when words ran out, hands took over.

Ali would run into the bathroom and sit on the cold floor, covering his ears.

He never told anyone. He never cried in front of people. He just became quiet — the quiet that feels too heavy for a child.

In school, his teacher called him “a polite boy.”

At home, he was just in the way.

He learned that silence kept him safe.

đź§Ť Growing Without Growing Up

By 16, Ali was taller, smarter, and better at hiding.

He got perfect grades, never caused trouble, and never raised his voice. But at night, he couldn’t sleep. His chest felt heavy. His heart raced. He thought maybe he had asthma, or a heart condition.

A doctor ran tests. “You’re fine,” they said. “Just stress.”

But no one asked: Where does a 16-year-old learn to carry this much stress?

At 20, he got into university. Everyone celebrated.

But he didn’t feel happy. He felt numb.

Sometimes he’d look in the mirror and ask, “Why don’t I feel anything?”

đź«€ The Panic Attack That Opened a Door

At 23, during a group presentation, it finally hit.

His palms began to sweat. His chest tightened. His mouth dried up. His vision blurred. He walked out in the middle of the class and collapsed outside.

They called an ambulance. The ER doctor asked, “Are you having family problems?”

Ali stared blankly.

The doctor handed him a paper: Panic disorder. Consider therapy.

He stuffed it in his pocket and said nothing.

But that night, the wound opened — not in his chest, but in his memory.

He remembered the bathroom floor. The broken plates. The silence.

It wasn’t his lungs that couldn’t breathe.

It was his heart — trapped for years.

🛋️ The First Time He Spoke

At 25, Ali sat across from a therapist.

He didn’t know what to say. He felt embarrassed.

But the therapist smiled gently and said, “You don’t have to be ready. You just have to show up.”

He began talking. Slowly. Clumsily.

He cried once, then apologized.

The therapist said, “You don’t have to say sorry for having feelings.”

Week by week, Ali began to understand that the anxiety wasn’t weakness.

It was a scar — from a wound that didn’t bleed.

He had lived through emotional violence. And like many others, he had buried it in silence.

Now, for the first time, he was learning to breathe with it.

🌤️ The Softness After the Storm

At 28, Ali started mentoring high school boys.

One of them reminded him of himself — quiet, polite, a little too careful.

Ali asked gently, “Are things okay at home?”

The boy shrugged, “Yeah. I mean… it’s not that bad.”

Ali paused, then said,

“Even if it doesn’t leave a bruise, it can still leave a mark.”

The boy looked at him — and something shifted in his eyes.

A moment of connection. Of safety.

Ali walked home that evening, and for the first time in years, he felt proud.

Not because he was “strong,”

but because he had chosen to heal.

💬 The Wounds We Don’t See

Not all pain comes with scars.

There are children and adults around us who are bleeding — not from knives, but from words, neglect, fear, and emotional storms that leave no mark on the skin.

They grow up quiet. Kind. Careful.

And inside, they carry years of things they never got to say.

This story is for them.

  • For the ones who were told, “It wasn’t that bad.”
  • For those who smiled to survive.
  • For those who were never hit, but deeply hurt.
  • For the grown-ups who are still healing from childhood.

You are not weak. You are not broken.

You are learning to live with a wound the world cannot see — and that takes courage.

advicefamilyhumanitylove

About the Creator

DR. Allama iqbal

Pharmacist with 6 years of experience, passionate about writing. I share real-life stories, health tips, and thoughtful articles that aim to inspire, inform, and connect with readers from all walks of life.

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.