A big floral box from our wedding, almost white on the sides where the sun has been hitting it throughout all of the years, is waiting for me at my childhood home. It's full of letters like this one, but on paper. Colourful cards, collected for years. Printed presentations with teddy bears and hearts. Beautiful birthday cards with even more beautiful wishes and proclamations of love... It took me about two hours to go through all of this and shred it apart. You would think I was bitter or sad, but I felt nothing. I was looking at the pile that I was creating next to me for the sake of preventing those letters and cards from ending up in some collector’s hands years from now, and I could not believe how unbothered I was, destroying my own history, my most treasured possessions for years! And then it hit me: I sold myself so cheaply! What I thought was extraordinary was just someone exercising his writing skills for his own validation. Exactly like the people he used to laugh at. It was all a lie.

For years, I was "a dream come true", I was what "brought magic in his life". Big words, bigger proclamations. In private and in public, I was claimed. I was given credit for my work behind the scenes, in private: "Because of you, I have a better relationship with my parents", "I had this success because of the advice you gave me". And for as long as I gave, without wanting recognition in return, it was fine.

Then the years went by, the ladders were climbed, and the peak was reached. What used to be a "Thank you!" became "I will never tell anyone that you have advised me to do that because then I will be the fool who does what his wife tells him to". I shaped who he was, and it was his time to shape me in return. So I became "alienated", which later became "crazy" and "inadequate".

I was told that friends were leaving me because "people don’t like to associate with those who aren’t successful".

In a moment of self-doubt, when I shared my self-doubt that I wasn’t good for anything, he said he was starting to doubt me as well.

When I showed him a picture of a beautiful woman in a floral dress in front of the pastel walls of her home and told him that this was what I wished I could be, he angrily told me that I could never be that.

"Let's be honest, you are not J.K. Rowling," was his comment on a dream of mine.

Every bit of support he had loudly given me over the years was undermined by little but consistent remarks aimed at pulling me down, consciously or not. For the world, however, it was all presentable: like the Facebook status on the wedding anniversary we spent arguing and in different rooms, that said something deep about "the importance of life choices we make", accompanied by a picturesque photo from our wedding day.

What stood out to me the most, however, was a random evening at the end, when I simply asked him not to be rude to me, to which he responded: "No man will ever treat you better than I do!"

Those were the things he said. And recently, I found them all to be true.

I had indeed been alienated and become socially awkward, not understanding the rules of modern-day relationships of any kind.

But then again... I learned how to enjoy my own company, even if it was not to be enjoyed by others. Then I found people who liked that about me and joined the weirdness, understood the emotional outbursts and kept me company.

I did lose a lot of friends who started seeing me as a burden. In some cases, they would show their frustration with me, with my life, with how stagnant everything had been; and in other cases, they would try to hide the real reason for them pulling away, but it would slip into words, phrases and gestures. Mainly, however, in their silence.
But then again, I also found friends who stayed. Friends who would show up with consistency, even when I was at my lowest. Even when I was deemed a failure by every societal norm, they found me precious.

I am not J.K. Rowling, nor have I ever attempted to be.
But then again, I never stopped writing, and I never stopped finding people who enjoyed what I had to say.

And I will never be that woman I saw on Instagram, and that's fine.

But then again, I started wearing floral dresses and opened all my senses to the beauty that had been surrounding me all along. And when you are surrounded by something so full of life and colour, you cannot help but absorb it into yourself. Now, when I meet the elderly couple who live in my building, they tell me that their day has become better bon meeting me. And that is just precious.

He told me no man would ever treat me better than he did, and sure enough, I fell in love with a man who made me feel completely worthless. As if to validate his words, I was constantly counting all the reasons why I'm unlovable, believing respect and kindness were only given in exchange for beauty and obedience. Yet, I knew it even back then - if that's the best I could hope for, I am better off alone.

But kindness finds its way, and I have indeed been treated nicely by men: be it strangers on the street, who would pay me a compliment, or friends, who would send me words of encouragement when I needed it the most. Some men have made me smile, and that already is strangers treating me better than he did.

For someone who loves words, I paid a great price to learn that they are worth nothing. Not the good ones, nor the bad ones. Words seem to be a fast-expiring currency - just wind between our teeth, fading ink on paper, or black pixels on a white background, soon to be forgotten.

All the things he said were lies. All of them. For the longest time, those words defined my reality, but now it's mine to build: with intention and probably less talking.

Not writing, though.

NIB and Ember

Blog

All The Things He Said

The price of "free" parental labour

As we all know, some through experience and others through common knowledge, separation and divorce often bring...
All The Things He Said

Misonne Weather

It was a sunny autumn afternoon last year when I got the idea to invite a friend for a sunrise photo shoot the very...
All The Things He Said

Healing Through Music

In five billion years, the Sun will engulf planets, including Earth, on its way to becoming a red giant....
All The Things He Said

As The Leaves Turn Brown

Here is what occupied my mind back in the autumn of 2022. Interestingly enough, history repeated itself this year as...
All The Things He Said

Mermaid (Fire to Liquid)

All The Things He Said

JGYST | Health as Top Ppriority

“Just get your shit together!” is a series of blog posts dedicated to the healing process after depression, or to...
All The Things He Said

Just Get Your Sh!t Together!

This post was originally published in 2022 on another platform, but I decided to keep the idea and continue writing...
All The Things He Said

10. Franz-Karl-Effenberg | Vienna Hiking Trails

It's a gloomy October day in 2023, and I am walking along hiking trail number 10 - spectacularly unspectacular: no...
All The Things He Said

9. Prater | Vienna Hiking Trails

The Prater trail is quite easy in the sense that it lacks any real hiking challenges. I strongly recommend splitting...
All The Things He Said

Hiking in Vienna | Wanderpass

Let me take you on a hike (or several) around Vienna! Back in 2022, as life was slowly beginning to feel normal...
All The Things He Said

Prater Museum

It's a sunny day at the beginning of September, and I have decided that we should visit the Prater Museum. Since I am...
All The Things He Said

St. Virgil Chapel

I have passed the St. Virgil Chapel many times without actually paying attention to the museum entrance. In general,...
All The Things He Said

The Vienna Clock Museum

What an absolutely unexpected treat that museum is! You don't need to be a watch collector or a clock enthusiast to...
All The Things He Said

Baby Shower (of a kind)

Back where I come from, we don't do baby showers before the baby is born. Or at least we didn't use to. When my...
All The Things He Said

Cake Pops

This is a recipe from the archive of a previous blog. I hope you enjoy! For the dessert table at the baby shower I...