It sat in my drafts for days. Maybe weeks.
Not because I didn’t know what to say—I knew exactly what needed to be said.
But because I already knew how it would end.
He wasn’t going to respond.
Still, I wrote the letter. Poured out the truth that had been burning holes in my chest for too long. The truth I had screamed into pillows, buried in late-night prayers, whispered in the quiet places I cried where no one could see me—not even my child.
It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t desperate.
It was honest. Tired. Grieving.
It was me finally saying all the words I never got to say when everything fell apart.
I almost didn’t send it.
There’s a kind of pain that comes with silence, and I was already hurting enough.
But I hit send anyway.
Not to win him back.
Not to make him feel guilty.
Not even to get closure.
But because pretending I didn’t care had started to feel like its own kind of betrayal.
I told him how deeply I had loved him.
How much I had lost—not just him, but the version of me that believed I was safe with him.
How I wasn’t angry anymore, just heartbroken.
How I had watched him walk away like everything we built was nothing—and how, even now, I still didn’t want to hate him.
And at the end, because it was the truest thing I had left, I ended it with the words:
“I do and will always love you.”
That was my goodbye.
And he said nothing.
No response. No explanation.
Just silence.
The kind that echoes in your bones and makes you feel stupid for ever believing any of it was real.
But that silence told me everything.
It wasn’t just disrespect.
It wasn’t confusion.
It was a choice.
He didn’t want to own what he broke.
He didn’t want to answer for the pain.
He didn’t even want to pretend I mattered.
And that hurt.
But strangely, that silence—the one I was so afraid of—also gave me something else: closure.
Real closure.
Not because he gave it to me, but because I finally stopped waiting for it to come from him.
The silence closed the door he didn’t have the courage to.
And for the first time in a long time, I chose myself—not the version of me that loved him, but the version of me that deserved to be loved back.
So no, he didn’t respond.
But I did what he never had the courage to do: I said goodbye.
And I meant it.
Even through tears.
Even with love still in my chest.
Even knowing he’d probably never read it the way I hoped he would.
I sent the goodbye he didn’t have the courage to say.
And somehow . . . that was enough.