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To be loved like this
To be loved like this
Penulis: Alanah Decker

One

Penulis: Alanah Decker
last update Terakhir Diperbarui: 2026-02-01 17:24:34

Somewhere between the dishes and the silence, she began to forget who she was. It happened slowly, almost kindly, the way erosion works: quiet, patient, unnoticed until something meaningful is gone. At first, it was subtle, like the way you don’t notice the days growing shorter until you’re suddenly driving home in the dark. One moment there was sunlight spilling across the dashboard, and the next, night had swallowed the road whole.

The girl who once dreamed out loud, who danced barefoot in the kitchen to songs she played too loud, who made promises to herself under moonlight like they were sacred vows, she had started living on autopilot. Days blurred together, measured in responsibilities and routines rather than moments. Her name was Raegan, but lately she felt more like a placeholder than a person. Someone filling space. Someone easily replaced.

She had been with Owen for four years. Maybe five. She had stopped counting after the second year, when time began to stretch thin and shapeless. Somewhere in the monotony, the same arguments circling back on themselves, the tired affection that felt more habitual than heartfelt, the constant explaining of her heart to someone who never quite seemed to understand it, the relationship settled into something stagnant. It wasn’t toxic, not really. There were no slammed doors or raised voices that lingered long enough to bruise. But it wasn’t love either. Not the kind that sparked laughter in the chest or made a place feel like home. It was obligation dressed up in comfort. A habit. Something familiar enough to feel safe, even as it quietly starved her.

The worst part wasn’t the loneliness. It was the fact that she didn’t even cry about it anymore. The tears had dried up somewhere along the way, replaced by a dull, constant ache. Sadness had become so normal that it barely registered.

One night, after brushing her teeth, Raegan paused in front of the bathroom mirror. The light hummed overhead. Same oversized shirt, worn thin from too many washes. Same tired eyes, ringed with exhaustion she couldn’t sleep away. The same toothbrush she’d had since before they moved in together, bristles bent and frayed, clinging to usefulness long past its prime. She stared at her reflection and realized she couldn’t remember the last time she felt alive. The last time she felt wanted, not for what she could do, or fix, or smooth over.. but simply for being who she was.

Then, as if her soul had finally whispered loud enough to be heard, the thought came, uninvited but undeniable:

This can’t be it.

This couldn’t be all there was. Waking up early to pack lunches for a man who barely looked up from his phone. Holding her tongue to keep the peace. Lowering her voice, her standards, her joy. Folding herself smaller and smaller just to avoid the echo of another argument. Smiling in pictures that didn’t feel like her life. Waiting. Always waiting. For something to change, for effort to appear, for someone to finally see her.

But something had shifted. Raegan felt it now, a strange, growing hunger. Not for someone else’s love, but for her own. For the life she once imagined when the world still felt wide open. For the girl she used to be before she learned how to settle. Before she mistook endurance for devotion.

That night, she sat on the cold tile floor of the bathroom, knees pulled to her chest, the quiet pressing in around her. The house was still. Even the walls seemed to be holding their breath. In the silence, she let herself feel it all. There was grief there, heavy and raw, for the years she’d spent making herself small, for the parts of her she’d tucked away to survive. But there was something else, too, something fragile, almost shy.

Hope. Faint, but flickering.

She didn’t have a plan yet. She didn’t know what leaving would look like or if she was brave enough to do it tomorrow or the next day. Fear still lived in her chest, loud and insistent. But beneath it was a certainty she couldn’t ignore anymore.

She was done waiting to be chosen.

She was going to choose herself.

And for the first time in a long time, that choice didn’t feel like an ending.

It felt like the beginning of something real.

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Christy Decker
Love the description of her feeling and slow realization of choosing herself.
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  • To be loved like this   Fifteen

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  • To be loved like this   Fourteen

    Marley had always believed that some women were born soft, and others had softness peeled away from them slowly, until only steel remained.Not the cold kind.Not the brittle kind.The kind forged by pressure and patience. The kind that bent before it broke, and then learned not to bend so far again.Raegan used to be the first kind.Gentle in a way that made people lean in, like they couldn’t quite believe someone so kind could exist without asking for something in return. She listened fully. Loved generously. Gave the benefit of the doubt long after it stopped being deserved. Marley had watched people take that softness like it was an infinite resource, never stopping to wonder what it cost her to keep offering it.But lately…Raegan was becoming steel.Not hardened. Not sharp-edged. Just armored. Learning how to hold her own weight without apologizing for it. Learning that strength didn’t have to be loud to be real.And Marley?Marley had never been more proud.When Raegan first mo

  • To be loved like this   Thirteen

    Bryer hadn’t expected to see her again.Not in this building.Not on a Thursday.Not with grocery bags cutting into her fingers and a low hum trailing from her lips like it belonged to some hidden melody already moving through the air.Raegan.Even her name landed like poetry in his mind. It was soft but certain, the kind of word you didn’t rush through. He’d almost dropped his pad thai when they collided outside his door, the paper handles swinging wildly as he scrambled to steady them both. She looked up at him, startled, eyes wide and bright with recognition.The same eyes that had caught his attention weeks ago in the bookstore.Back then, she’d said almost nothing. No flirtation. No performance. Just presence. And somehow, that had spoken volumes. She hadn’t needed the spotlight. She carried that quiet gravity about her, like the moon. The kind of presence that pulled you in slowly, steadily, without making a sound.And when she said his name “Bryer?” his whole body responded, wa

  • To be loved like this   Twelve

    The first time Raegan saw Bryer again, she was holding a bag of groceries and humming under her breath.The sound surprised her when she noticed it. Soft, absentminded, slipping out without permission. She hadn’t been humming for very long, not consciously, but it seemed to follow her lately. Like her body was remembering something before her mind caught up.The elevator in Marley’s building had been out all week, which should have been annoying. Instead, Raegan had started using the fire escape to come and go, climbing carefully with her tote bag bumping against her hip. Something about it made her feel like the main character in a life she was finally writing for herself. Finally moving through the world with intention instead of obligation.She was rounding the corner toward Marley’s front door, keys threaded between her fingers, mentally cataloging what she still needed for dinner, when she nearly collided with someone stepping out of the apartment next door.Two bags of takeout s

  • To be loved like this   Eleven

    Raegan didn’t cry when she closed the apartment door behind her.She didn’t look back either.Not because it didn’t hurt, but because she knew what looking back would cost. She’d already given that place enough of herself. Enough pauses, enough swallowed words, enough nights convincing herself that quiet was the same as peace. So she lifted the box in her arms, adjusted the strap of her bag on her shoulder, and stepped forward.She carried only what mattered. Clothes she actually wore. Books that felt like home. A few notebooks thick with old thoughts and half-formed truths. Pieces of herself she was learning how to hold again.The rest she left behind, folded neatly into drawers and corners of silence. She’d shed enough versions of herself to know: not everything deserves to be carried into the next chapter. Some things are meant to stay as proof of where you’ve been, not as baggage for where you’re going.Marley lived in a small two-bedroom apartment above a bakery that always smell

  • To be loved like this   Ten

    Owen didn’t cry at first.He just sat there.On the edge of the bed where Raegan once slept, legs drawn up, arms wrapped loosely around himself like a child afraid of the dark. Except the dark wasn’t the room. It was the space inside him she used to fill, the quiet he never noticed because she had always softened it for him.The bedroom looked exactly the same.That was the cruelest part.Her shoes still sat by the door, neatly paired the way she always left them. The empty coffee cup rested on the windowsill, forgotten in the rush of an ordinary morning that now felt impossibly distant. A hoodie; it was hers, definitely hers, hung over the back of the couch, sleeves dangling like she might slip back into it any second.But she wasn’t coming back for any of it, at least not tonight.She hadn’t forgotten a single thing.He thought he’d be angry. Thought there would be yelling, maybe a cracked plate or a fist through the wall. Some loud, cinematic release that made the pain feel justifi

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