The room felt unnaturally quiet after everything happened, as if even sound was giving space to grief. I sat by the window watching the light shift, unable to understand how the world continued when mine had changed so completely. Words from others drifted past me, but none reached the hollow place inside, where loss and disbelief lingered together.
The next day, leaving the hospital, I felt empty rather than openly sad. As I walked down the hallway, an elderly woman gently stopped me. She spoke calmly, offering words that felt like permission to pause, then placed a small, symbolic item in my hand before quietly stepping away.
At home, I kept the item, unsure why it mattered yet unable to part with it. In the weeks that followed, grief came in waves—sometimes sharp, sometimes soft. Slowly, I realized healing wasn’t about forgetting, but about learning to carry the loss without letting it consume every moment.
Looking back, that brief encounter was not dramatic but meaningful. It marked the first time I believed that even in deep sorrow, connection can bring quiet comfort. Healing came gradually, through reflection and support, and through understanding that moving forward does not mean letting go of what mattered.