• A Retrospective on Collapse and Reinvention: Part I

    A personal account of love, grief, and ambition during an incredibly formative period of my life. Part 1 is about the heartbreak that set everything in motion.

    Looking back now, I don’t know how obvious it was to the people around me, to the strangers who met me, or to those who followed what I shared online. Maybe they could see it. Maybe they couldn’t. But when I look back, the internal chaos is impossible to miss.

    I was suffering in ways I can barely put into words while simultaneously beginning my journey to becoming a doctor.

    When it happened, I was beginning a post-baccalaureate program to complete the coursework I needed to apply to medical school, navigating COVID, juggling 4 different jobs, and trying to make sense of my complicated relationships with my mother and father.

    Then my boyfriend abruptly unraveled.

    In the weeks leading up to his breakdown, I was buried in organic chemistry, calculus, endless assignments, and taking my first serious steps toward a career in medicine, yet he routinely complained that I wasn’t giving him enough attention. At the same time, he was posting photos with another woman that blurred the line between friendship and something more, prompting friends to ask whether we had broken up.

    Then things became even stranger.

    After a night of drinking, he walked an hour from the bar to my house at two in the morning, attempting to break in. He repeatedly called and texted, shined lights through my windows, yelled from outside, searched for a spare key, and demanded that I let him sleep on my porch. I refused and told him to leave.

    The next day, his father called me and said he had checked himself into a psychiatric hospital.

    Despite everything, I would have stayed in his life. Not necessarily as a romantic partner, but as someone who cared about him. I would have kept my distance, if necessary, but I would have remained close by. I genuinely loved him, and, at that point, I really needed him too.

    Instead, he ended it all with a bland text message and disappeared.

    I went to therapy. I started dating someone new. My therapist reassured me that I would be okay and discharged me after only a few sessions. On the surface, it looked like I was moving forward.

    Months later, he sent me a long email. Eventually I called him, and we met in person. During that conversation, he detailed his sexual experiences with various women after our breakup. He boasted that one of them had even sketched a nude portrait of him.

    One evening while I was out, 2 years after the initial breakup, I unexpectedly ran into another woman he had been involved with. Somehow he came up in a drunk-girl bathroom conversation, and her reaction to meeting me was immediate.

    “Oh my God. You’re THE ex.”

    I remember thinking: Why am I still being discussed years after he ended our relationship? Why was he talking about me to women he was casually sleeping with?

    I expressed that I still cared for him and she encouraged me to reach out, so I did.

    He moved on. I never heard from him again.

    The truth is, there is nothing extraordinary about him. But he was my best friend.

    We laughed constantly. We understood each other’s humor. We shared a friendship that felt genuine and timeless, and that is the part I will always miss. Some friendships are irreplaceable, even when the relationship surrounding them fails.

    Over time, though, my attraction to him faded. His emotional immaturity, poor hygiene, and inability to provide stability slowly eroded any sexual desire I had for him.

    When I think back to the beginning, there are things I understand differently now.

    Our first date lasted over 8 hours. It unfolded across a perfect July day in Connecticut. Boats, beaches, greens, and gardens. As we were driving, he spotted a piano and instructed me to pull over. I laid down and he played. Being in his presence felt magical.

    I liked him. I was attracted to him. But I wanted to take things slowly and be intentional. I was not interested in pursuing a romantic relationship yet because I was still getting to know him.

    Instead, he kept pushing me sexually.

    As the day shifted into night, he repeatedly exposed his genitals and complained about how uncomfortable his prolonged erection was. I was younger then and less sure of myself. But all my no’s and stop’s never landed. Eventually the pressure became too much, and we had sex.

    I remember feeling like I didn’t want to. I still carry shame about that.

    As the relationship continued, there were other moments that made me uncomfortable. One memory stands out vividly. We were at his family’s house, upstairs in his bedroom, and he kept demanding that I perform oral sex on him. I became so uncomfortable that I left entirely. Later he apologized and admitted he had crossed a line.

    At another point he confessed to me that he had been accused of raping a female classmate in high school, but that the case went nowhere because the DNA evidence was inconclusive.

    Toward the end of our relationship, he became interested in restraints and other forms of sexual experimentation. While I was open-minded, I remember one experience where I was physically restrained and suddenly felt panicked. I made him stop.

    Looking back, I don’t think I ever truly felt safe with him.

    What strikes me most now is how naive I was during that relationship. I never questioned his loyalty. I never looked through his phone. I never felt the need to investigate him.

    Meanwhile, he was constantly jealous and monitoring me.

    After the breakup, I started connecting dots I had previously ignored. His Instagram following was filled with women whose photos he consistently liked while we were supposedly in a committed relationship. It embarrasses me now. Not because of what it says about me, but because of what it revealed about him.

    The friendship was real. The affection was real. But I was carrying too much to see everything clearly.

    Most painful of all is realizing that he never truly respected me.

    His lack of respect became undeniable in the way he ended the relationship. That is the part that still makes me sick when I think about it. Not the breakup itself, but the cruelty and disregard with which it was handled.

    He was comfortable hiding enormous parts of himself. The depression. The suicidal thoughts. The diagnosis of intermittent explosive disorder. Sometimes I wonder whether he was simply very skilled at concealing who he really was, or whether I was too consumed by everything else in my life to fully grasp the gravity of his declining mental health.

    There are questions I will never get answers to. There are gaps in the story that I’ve had to make peace with.

    While we were together, I had gotten him a remote marketing job through one of my closest friends. After the breakup, he fizzled out from that job and then began working at my other friend’s restaurant, without my knowledge. It felt bizarre. He claimed he didn’t want to be with me, yet he kept positioning himself within my orbit.

    After I ran into him at his new restaurant job for the first time, I started working with another therapist and told her about all of this. She was concerned enough to suggest that some of his behavior resembled stalking. She offered to help me file a police report and obtain a restraining order if necessary. She instructed me to check my car for tracking devices and make sure my phone and location services hadn’t been compromised.

    I never pursued any of it.

    At the time, I told myself everything was fine.

    The entire period after the breakup was profoundly confusing. Nothing seemed to make sense. The mixed signals, the strange reappearances, the lingering presence, the lack of accountability.

    What I wish most is that he had handled the ending differently.

    I wish he had shown empathy. I wish he had shown respect. I wish he had honored the love and friendship we shared.

    Instead, he chose a path that left me questioning reality, questioning myself, and navigating the aftermath on my own.

    The breakup itself was survivable. A painful but welcome liberation.

    It was the cruelty of its execution and the psychological whiplash that followed that left the deepest scars.

  • How To Be Alone With Your Thoughts

    FALLING

    I am in this phase of transforming right now. I am metabolizing pain and alchemizing it to wisdom. In the beginning, it was terrifying. Like jumping from a height, falling, unsure of the ground beneath me. Where will I land? How will I land? Anticipating the impact. Feeling the wind. But the wisdom is in trusting that fate is moving pieces around me. I am certain that the bottoms of my feet will touch earth again.

    CHRYSALIS

    The old version of me has died. And so now enters the phase where I no longer exist while simultaneously I am in the process of becoming. The timeline has folded into itself. It’s the archetype of the hermit. I am in a chrysalis. And did you know that when the caterpillar is in the chrysalis they are actually just a mush of enzymes and insect parts?

    What’s next? I am patient as the new version of me begins to materialize.

    STIMULUS

    All the people around me are so busy. Constantly talking on the phone, going somewhere, running an errand, working, tinkering, listening, watching. When is there a moment you can just be alone with your thoughts? Is it in the shower? Is it before you fall asleep at night? I love stimulation as well. Especially as a medical student, I am constantly chasing information, listening, practicing, completing tasks, scanning for patterns, moving, absorbing.

    MEDITATION

    But I do long for the quiet hum of nothingness. I crave sitting on my warm floor, crossed legs, eyes closed, just being. Meditation is sacred. It’s laborious. It requires persistence. The time I spend giving space to my thoughts, dreams, fears, body sensations, rehashing experiences, projecting onto the future is important. It is especially important as I move through this liminal space.

    Information comes to me. It gives reflection a place to unfold. Ideas have a place to land. Insight arrives. My inner world expands. It keeps getting bigger and bigger. I need the space to plan, strategize, and execute it. They say meditation helps you become less reactive and more flow. This work gives me the ability to slow down time and act with discernment.

    EXPANSION

    I am building realities around me using my thoughts.

    My mind is a garden. My thoughts are the seeds. What do I want to be able to harvest a year from now?

    My mind is a radio. My thoughts are the stations. What frequency do I want to tune to?

    When it comes to disease, we look at food, activity, habits. Are we looking at the habits of our thoughts? What do you think about all day? I am aware of my thoughts as I am thinking them. I am building the muscle of changing the station.

    This is a transformation led by my soul, not my primitive human self. And I think we can only hear what our soul has to say when we quiet out the world.

    RELEASE

    The recent collection of years have been rapid fire from the universe. God has presented challenge after challenge. I went down so many paths. I’ve fallen and got back up gracefully, messily. I’ve tripped, skipped, ran and crawled away from and towards sequences of my existence.

    It has been a series of open heart surgeries. How many times am I meant to crack my chest open? The reward is resilience. Pain is the spark. And eventually I will start crying less. But I will never stop fighting back.

  • Seeds

    Warning: This short story contains sexual assault and animal abuse.

    I woke up beneath the sound of rain licking the sides of the tent. I wanted to keep dreaming, wrapped in my sleeping bag, but Andrew had already put his glasses on. We rummaged through our musty clothes with flashlights and slipped on our outfits for the day. Brushed hair, fresh socks, and deodorant didn’t matter anymore. I walked barefoot across the farm. Keith would chip away at me for not wearing shoes.

    “There’s poison ivy everywhere,” he scolded, but the entire two-and-a-half weeks I worked on their farm in Georgia, I never got it. We loaded the pick up truck with chicken feed and oyster shells and began the day.

    After breakfast, Andrew and I were exiled to the rows of potatoes to weed. Keith and Katie were on the other side of the property, probably inside. My soggy jacket lapped onto my skin every time I yanked out a weed. Whenever we were alone, Andrew would tell me secrets. He shared how his brother moved to Orlando, FL, how he never drank because his mom was an alcoholic. He told me the story of how he accidentally discovered Keith and Katie having sex in the greenhouse on a full moon. He talked a lot like he couldn’t stop, so I listened. Mud was caked up to my wrists. I was cold and aching for lunch, but I kept working.

    I had come to the farm to learn about sustainable living and permaculture. I longed to get out of the city of Tampa and back to nature. I had a backpack with some clothes, a bare-bones tent from Walmart and a secondhand sleeping bag that I bought from Goodwill for $8. I planned 3 farm stays in Georgia, Washington, and Alaska.

    One afternoon, Tom the turkey was following us around as we worked. This was normal. He would puff air out of his beak, spike the feathers on his back and bump into my shins with his chubby turkey chest. He was more of a companion than a meal. Today he was different towards Keith—he was pecking and biting. I saw Keith hold back for a minute, but anger cracked him open. He jabbed the tip of his shoe into Tom’s fluff. He would alternate foot as Tom landed to each side. When he finished, he wrapped chicken wiring around him like a cage. Andrew laughed.

    Keith and Katie were enthusiastic about water conservation. They collected rainwater and gave us a hole in the ground for a bathroom. “When you’re done, just cover it up with wood chips,” Keith explained to me the first day I had arrived. Very rustic, I thought, but I embraced it. I always had dirt stained kneecaps and probably should have showered more often, but Keith and Katie’s generosity only stretched so far.

    We typically worked 12 hours a day, only stopping for meals. We were allowed 2 days off a week. I took any opportunity to leave, to get out of isolation. Andrew would take me on nature walks that ended in waterfalls. We sunbathed on rocks with swimsuits on and jumped in cold streams. Moths landed on my toes and I stole a piece of quartz from a gift shop once and didn’t tell anyone about it until right now.

    One Friday, Andrew took me to downtown Chattanooga for their weekly summer festival. Country music twisted my gut with repugnance, but I was willing to go because I was curious about Southern culture. Andrew loved country music. He always played it in the car and while we worked. Keith loved it too and the two of them would play Bob Dylan together on their acoustic guitars.

    I borrowed one of Andrew’s flannels because it kept my body warm. He dug through his car for his black cowboy hat and put it on with excitement. I paid for parking. We walked side by side to the event. He latched on, wanting to hold hands, but I squirmed away from each attempt.

    There were food trucks, loose children and heavy country music beating at my ears. We arrived at the stage and Andrew lost himself inside a crowd of people. I stayed on the side, observing him dance as onlookers took pictures and videos of him with their cellphones. He danced like he had been hired for a cowboy bachelorette––hips thrusting, eyes closed, and mouth open. He was too lost inside himself to notice all the people staring. I wandered away, but couldn’t disappear.

    I walked two steps ahead of him on the way back to his car. I watched the silence weigh his head down. We kept the windows rolled down on the ride back. Night was cold without the sun.
    He parked his car in his usual patch of tall grass. We stayed there for a minute with our seatbelts still on. I wanted to sleep in my own tent tonight and he knew. He asked me what was wrong and why I was so mad—so clueless and confused.

    I told him that there were children and families and people were disturbed. I saw their expressions when they pulled their kids away, eyes first.

    “I didn’t even think about that,” Andrew said, “I love to get lost in the music. It makes me feel closer to God.”

    I made him recall the second day I was here. We were talking in the kitchen after lunch. I looked at him and his face reminded me of my little brother. They were both blonde. He asked me if I wanted to continue the conversation outside. It sounded nice and I wanted to be his friend. Just his friend.

    Andrew zipped the tent closed. It was raining quietly. He lay down horizontally on some blankets while I sat up with my legs crossed and listened to him talk. I felt his intentions like I could smell his dried sweat, but I stayed. He told me to lie down like him. I listened. He put his hand on my heart. I thought it was sweet and let him. Before I could think, he smashed his face into mine, clutching the back of my head to keep me there.

    He rolled on top of me. I didn’t say no, but I didn’t have the air to say any words at all. “What do you like,” he kept asking, “What turns you on?” Not right now, I thought, but I just looked at him confused. “I don’t know,” I said, but he demanded an answer.

    He ripped down my pants. I wasn’t wearing underwear. I told him no and pulled them back to my hips. I tried to get out of there, but he had me locked. Dinner should be ready soon. His teeth were everywhere.
    I was only on the farm for 19 hours. He felt like a starving wolf—so hungry I didn’t even need to take my shirt off, he didn’t even need to see my face.

    I came to Keith and Katie’s farm with innocence and curiosity, but it felt like I walked right into a cage. My openness was a vulnerability.

    In the car, Andrew apologized for what he had done. He had his reasons. We all had reasons, but they could never be excuses. I told him that it was okay. We slept separately that night.

    Andrew had been on the farm for 4 months now and he told me it was time for him to leave. He said learning from Keith and Katie had plateaued. He said if we couldn’t be together, he didn’t want to stay. He asked me to be his girlfriend plenty of times: on the rocks by the river, in the tree house. I said no every time. We were never together; we were just in the same place at the same time.

    I was excited for him to leave, but also nervous to be alone with Keith and Katie for another 2 weeks. The night before Andrew left, I sat on the couch reading a book on meditation. Keith sat down in the chair opposite me and started talking. He told me that Andrew was driving down to Florida and that I should go with him. They knew I was from Tampa and that this would be the most convenient way for me to leave. I wasn’t working hard enough, I wasn’t appreciative enough, he said. I promised that I would be better. I hated Kieth and his cold glare. I hated Katie and her chin acne.

    The next morning, I left with Andrew. I paid him $40 to drop me off in Tampa at my friend’s place. 10 more hours and I am free, I thought. He made us stop halfway at a hotel that his Dad paid for. One more night, just one more night, I thought as I centered myself. I think I had been pretending for too long. I lied and acted to keep myself from turning into ash. I knew that it would be over soon, so I did what I had to do to keep him calm.

    We pulled up to the yellow house. He brought my things inside and pushed his way in. I introduced him to the dog. We said goodbye to each other and he went back into his car. He lingered in the driveway, texting and fiddling with his GPS. Finally, he drove away. I took a shower so hot it burned my skin. I looked at my phone, still in my towel. It was dead. My charger was in my backpack, but I didn’t look for it.

    If you or someone you know has experienced sexual assault, healing and recovery is possible. Visit www.rainn.org or call 800-656-HOPE for help.