A Letter to the Season I Went Missing

I didn’t notice the exact moment I slipped under. It wasn’t dramatic, more like a slow fade. One day I looked up and realized whole months, even years had gone by, and I wasn’t sure how to explain any of it, even to myself. Trauma has a way of doing that, eating away at the edges of your life until you don’t recognize the shape of things anymore.

For a long time, I blamed myself for that. For going quiet. For slowing down. For needing help. For not being “strong enough” in the ways I thought I should be. But the truth is, I wasn’t disappearing. I was doing work no one could see. The kind of work that doesn’t look inspiring or tidy from the outside. The kind of work that happens in the nervous system, in old wounds, in the places you don’t talk about because you barely have language for them.

There were days I truly fell apart. Days where even breathing felt like effort. Days where the weight of cancer, parenting, appointments, fear, and grief pressed so hard that all I could do was exist in a puddle of my own tears and hope that was enough. And somehow, even in those moments, something in me kept trying. It kept reaching. It kept choosing to stay. Tiny, shaky steps, but still steps.

That’s what I’m proud of. Not the polished parts. Not the brave face. Not the strength people think they see. I’m proud of the quiet work. The work done in the dark. The work no one claps for…the work only I could do.

Trauma therapy cracked open places I didn’t know were still holding their breath. It taught my body that danger isn’t everywhere, that it’s allowed to soften, that I can belong to myself again. And slowly, painfully, beautifully, I started to come back.

I still feel fragile. I think that’s just the truth for now. But I also feel steady in a new way. Steady enough to write again. Steady enough to let my voice exist without trying to manage how it lands. Steady enough to stop explaining myself to ghosts. So this letter isn’t a comeback. It’s a recognition!

I went missing for a while. I lost pieces of myself. But I didn’t disappear. I’ve been rebuilding quietly and honestly and on my own terms.

If I ever doubt myself again, I want this written somewhere: I did the hardest work of my life in silence, and no one has to understand it for it to matter. I survived things I was never prepared for. I rebuilt pieces of myself I thought were gone forever.

And this part is important; I don’t owe anyone a performance of what that healing looked like.
This letter isn’t an update or an invitation. It’s a marker for me. A reminder that I am allowed to choose myself quietly and privately and without apology.

I’m proud of the woman standing here now, fragile yes, but awake.
And waking up is its own kind of triumph.

The Truth About Healing: It Changes You, and Then It Changes Again

You know what’s funny?

I think I finally have it figured out.
Not life, not everything, but this. This version of me. This season. This phase.

That’s the thing about healing, or coming into yourself: it changes. It comes in phases. And I’m finally learning to be okay with that. To actually feel content inside each phase, even if I know it won’t last forever. To process as I go, not dig for meaning in every crack.

The truth is, I’ve spent so much of my time lost.
Lost in trauma.
Lost in emotion.
Lost in numbness.
Lost in grief. (I still grieve.)
Lost in trying to figure out who I am and why all of this has happened.

But once I combed through the hardest parts of my life,
Once I evaluated (maybe over-evaluated),
cried into my pillow,
stayed up all night for too many nights,
screamed on the bathroom floor,
and had to walk out of the room after looking at my children,
Once I did all of that, and finally accepted life as it is,
something in me settled.

I realized: this is what life is.

It’s not perfect, it’s not fair, and I don’t get to control the most devastating things.
But I do get to be here.

And I realized that my purpose…
It’s not a job or a title or some fancy calling.

My purpose is to be a mother.

I’ve always known it. But I had to live through hell to believe it fully.
I had to stop forcing it to be anything more.

And maybe it is more.
Maybe it doesn’t have to be just one thing.
But this…this is what’s clear to me now, in this season of life.

I’ve also come to see that everyone is struggling with something. Some people wear it out loud. Some hide it. Some look like they’ve got it all together but are falling apart inside. And knowing that, really knowing it, helped me stop trying to measure myself against the world. That’s when contentment started to take root.

And when I became content?

That’s when real love and happiness started to shine through.

Now don’t get me wrong. I’m still human. I still get overwhelmed.
I still say things out of frustration.
I still mess up.

But I’m working on it. I’m always working on me.

And I’m finally deciding to be selfish. Not because I’m bitter, or angry, or burned (though I’ve been all of those before).
But because me and my family deserve it.

They deserve all of me.
Not the scattered, exhausted, guilt-ridden version.
But the one who is present. Who can meet them in their own moments of human-ness.

So yeah. I’m in my content, happy, and reminiscing on life era.

And I love it.
And I’m going to protect it at all costs.

With peace (finally),

Crystal


If you’re still in the chaos, still in the questions; hold on. You don’t have to force your purpose.
You might be living it already.

And even if it doesn’t feel that way yet…
your content era will come.

It really will.

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What Almost Dying Taught Me About Living

A Quick Note to my Readers:

You might notice a shift in how I write some of my posts from here on out. While Letters to Life started in a letter format (and some posts may still follow that style), I’ve found that sometimes, writing more directly feels more natural, and more me. I’m still figuring out what fits best as I grow and heal, so you’ll see a mix as I go. The heart of it stays the same. And honestly… it’s my blog, so I get to do what I want. 😉

I’ve had brushes with death before. But this one felt different.

As many of my readers know, I had a cryoablation and biopsy done on several liver tumors, which resulted in a hospital admission for a few nights due to unexpected complications. During the procedure, I was sedated, but not asleep. I could hear everything. I could feel everything. They had me heavily medicated, but the pain cut through it all. It got so intense I wanted to scream for them to stop. And then, after it peaked… everything blurred.

I don’t remember much until I came to in a hospital bed, pain crashing back in. I didn’t know yet that I was bleeding internally, not until they told me there were complications. After they came in with an ultrasound machine and confirmed that blood had traveled from my stomach and into my chest cavity. That they were admitting me. Hearing “internal bleeding” suddenly made all the pain make sense. It also made it real. That’s when fear started creeping in. But something else happened too.

I remember looking at Carl, sitting by my side. I could see the worry in his face, the kind he tries to hide. And in that moment, something in me shifted. I felt this wave of love. Deep, grounded love. I knew, somehow, that I was being held. That I wasn’t alone. That I could go inward and let my body do what it needed to do.

The pain was still there, but peace showed up too. There was a strange separation, like I wasn’t fully in my body anymore. Time didn’t exist. It wasn’t fast or slow… just gone. And I wasn’t scared. Not then. Fear didn’t hit me until I was fully “back” in my body, when the pain spiked again and I felt myself slipping into survival mode. But looking back, even that fear was a gift. Because it meant I was alive.

Something shook loose in me during that experience. Not just fear. Not just pain. But old beliefs and baggage I’d been trying to release for years. I’ve said it before, I knew I needed to let go of control. But no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t let go completely. This time, it wasn’t up to me. The universe took it out of my hands. It helped me see what had always been there: love, support, and a reason to keep going.

Once I was stable again, I felt different. Lighter, maybe. More aware. I could see my people more clearly, the ones fighting for me so I can keep fighting. I felt their love in a way I hadn’t before. Not just in my head, but in my bones. In my soul. And something else shifted, too. How I love others.

Before, I think I was tangled up in my own thoughts, wondering if I had to earn love, or who truly cared, or whether it was safe to trust it. But now… I just love. I don’t need to hold it so tightly. I don’t need to make sense of it. I just let it be what it is.

What matters most to me now is living. Truly living. Letting go of the stress I began to carry again over the past year. The fear of what might happen. The pressure to control every outcome. I still have cancer. I still have pain. But I also have something I didn’t before. Permission. Permission to live the way I’ve been trying to live for years.

And I plan to.

Love, Me

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