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Where the Fire Finally Let Me Go

Let Me Go🔥

By Dakota Denise Published about a month ago • 2 min read

I used to fear endings.

Not because they hurt,

but because they made me feel like a house

that had already burned once

and still smelled like smoke.

People think flames just appear—

a spark, a hiss, a bloom of heat.

But the truth is,

some fires start long before anyone strikes a match.

In a forgotten corner of a heart,

in the silence between two breaths,

in a room you avoid because you know

something inside you is still smoldering.

My last flame wasn’t a lover

or a memory

or a tragedy with a clean shape.

It was me.

A version of myself that refused to die,

even when I outgrew her.

She clung to my ribs like soot,

whispering reasons to stay small, stay quiet, stay afraid.

She knew every soft spot,

every crack in the foundation,

every place where light couldn’t reach.

But endings come anyway.

Sometimes with a roar,

sometimes with a flicker,

sometimes with a trembling hand

striking its own match.

When the last fire finally rose in me,

I didn’t run.

I didn’t throw water.

I didn’t beg.

I sat in it.

I let it lick old wounds

I pretended didn’t throb.

I let it consume the words

I swallowed for peace.

I let it melt the version of me

who kept apologizing for the way I survived.

I burned.

Not down—

open.

In the glow of my undoing,

truth flickered like a warning

and a blessing:

Some endings are not punishment.

Some flames are not destruction.

Some fires exist

to show you the shape of the person

you were never allowed to become.

When the flame dimmed,

when the smoke thinned,

when the air grew cool like a fresh decision—

I exhaled a breath

I didn’t know I’d been holding for years.

The room was quiet.

Ash drifted like slow snowfall—

soft, weightless, free.

I touched my own pulse

and felt something steady

and shockingly new.

I had not been burned away.

I had been revealed.

What remained was not ruin,

but the bones of a beginning—

clean, warm, unashamed.

Some people watch the last fire fade

and grieve.

But when I watched mine,

I finally understood:

The flame did not leave me.

I left the flame.

And for the first time,

my life did not smell like smoke.

It smelled like something

just learning

how to breathe.

Stream of Consciousness

About the Creator

Dakota Denise

Every story I publish is real lived, witnessed, survived, or confessed into my hands. The fun part? I never say which. Think you can spot truth from fiction? Comment your guesses. Everything’s true. The lie is what you think I made up.

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