Saturday, 28 February 2026

 They told her she had no real pain.

“Other people have bigger problems.”

“Look at the world.”

“You’re fine.”

As if suffering needs permission.

As if pain must compete.

She listened quietly while they measured her wounds against someone else’s tragedies. She even understood what they meant. She knew people were starving somewhere. She knew someone had lost more. She knew life could be worse.

But knowing that didn’t make her chest feel lighter at night.

It didn’t stop the overthinking.

It didn’t silence the battles in her head.

It didn’t make the hurt disappear.

Empathy for others does not cancel personal pain.

But emotionally immature people don’t understand that. They think maturity means comparison. They think strength means silence. They think if someone is not bleeding publicly, they must not be wounded at all.

So they say things like,

“You’re overreacting.”

“You’re too sensitive.”

“You have nothing to be sad about.”

What they really mean is:

“I don’t know how to sit with your emotions.”

And instead of admitting that, they shrink her feelings to protect their comfort.

Just because she chooses to fight quietly doesn’t mean the war is small.

Just because she doesn’t scream about it doesn’t mean it doesn’t hurt.

Just because she handles things alone doesn’t mean she isn’t tired.

There is a dangerous assumption in this world — that loud pain is real pain, and quiet pain is drama.

But the strongest people often suffer in silence. They don’t post every breakdown. They don’t narrate every tear. They get up, wash their face, and continue.

And then someone has the audacity to say,

“You don’t even have problems.”

That sentence cuts deeper than they realize.

Because it’s not just dismissal.

It’s erasure.

She never said her pain was bigger than anyone else’s. She never claimed she had it worst. She only wanted one simple thing — acknowledgment.

Not comparison.

Not competition.

Just understanding.

But immature minds think emotions are weakness. They think suppressing feelings makes them strong. They confuse emotional numbness with maturity.

And ironically, they call her immature.

The one who feels deeply.

The one who reflects.

The one who survives quietly.

They mistake her silence for exaggeration.

They mistake her sensitivity for instability.

They mistake her composure for an easy life.

What they don’t see is the strength it takes to carry pain without turning bitter.

What they don’t see is the discipline it takes to not collapse publicly.

What they don’t see is the courage it takes to heal without applause.

She doesn’t need to be stronger.

She already is.

Because strength is not about having the worst story in the room.

It’s about surviving the one you were given.

And anyone who says,

“You don’t have pain. Others have bigger problems,”

has simply revealed their own emotional limitations. And immaturity.

Pain is not a ranking system.

Struggles are not a competition.

And silence is not proof of comfort.

She is not dramatic.

She is not overreacting.

She is not weak.

She is fighting battles they are not mature enough to understand.

And she will continue to fight — not to prove her pain exists, but because she knows it does.

And that is strength.

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 They told her she had no real pain. “Other people have bigger problems.” “Look at the world.” “You’re fine.” As if suffering needs permissi...