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On Letting Go


To those that we leave behind.

I am in my massage class. Outside, the rain is pouring, loud, relentless, and we stop, just for a moment, to listen. Melbourne has been sweltering for days now, the kind of heat that clings to your skin, the kind that makes you grab for a cone of ice cream, so the rain feels, for once, like a gift.

There are five of us today, just five, and Gulchin is teaching us about releasing tight spots.

We go into pairs, like always. One on the table, the other massaging.

Someone mentions how she doesn’t have the stamina to see multiple clients in a day, how her body feels weak, unprepared. Gulchin nods, softly, as though she understands in a way only time could teach her.

She tells us, she used to have that stamina, but not anymore. Not since her husband passed away, a year and a half ago.

The air changes. She says it gently, almost like an afterthought, but her voice gives her away. Her body feels different now, broken in places that can’t be seen. She still loves massage, but the loss has made her dial everything back.

The room falls quiet. Outside, the rain continues to fall, steady, steady. 

She notices the shift, apologizes. But then, stories start to spill, unprompted. One by one, everyone shares. The weight of loss, of grief, sits in the space between us, fragile, but real.

Later, we’re practicing techniques, the elbow method, targeting knots deep in the back.

The girl practicing has her fist clenched tight, her body stiff, and Gulchin moves closer.

Let go,

she says, quietly, but it echoes loudly through the room. 

The girl loosens her fist, unclenches, softens her body.

The tension is gone. The technique works.

But those words—let go—linger, hangs in the air. 

It feels like Gulchin isn’t just saying it to her.

She’s saying it to herself, to the space all around us, to the grief that clings to her.

She’s giving herself permission, the kind we never say out loud, to loosen her hold, to move forward, to just—let go.

I think about those two words, and they rest heavy on my chest.

Let go.

I think about the things I hold onto, the way my fingers curl so tightly around memories, the way I let pain sit, stubborn, in my body, like it belongs there.

Let go,

I tell myself, again and again, like a mantra, until it starts to feel real.

I don’t have to hold on to the past so tightly.

I can leave the hurt where it belongs.

I can keep the good, let the rest fall away, and build something new.

The rain is still falling, steady, steady, as I sit there, thinking of all the things I’m ready to let go of.

And maybe, just maybe, I will.

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"I can leave the hurt where it belongs."

That's the goal, of course, and I hope with all my heart that it happens for you. 

Be prepared, however, for an occasional, sudden re-emergence of grief.  It's not a "one-n-done" thing.  It hides, lingers in the hidden recesses of the mind, and sometimes it'll jump out and kick you in the balls.  The passage of decades can diminish it's power, but I don't believe anyone with a modicum of humanity can completely dismiss grief.  

It's sort of like an old chair that we can't bring ourselves to toss out; it's uncomfortable, it's ugly, worn, even threadbare, and we cover it up with a nice "throw" or something, but there is it, just waiting for us to weaken and plop down in it.  The positive thing though, is that we can learn to control how often we sit there, and make those visits fewer over the years.  

I hope you can eventually ditch your old chair - toss it out for good.  I haven't, but at least it's in a disused room now, and covered with other old stuff that only weighs me down now.  One of these years ..... 

  • Upvote 1
3 hours ago, hntnhole said:

It's sort of like an old chair that we can't bring ourselves to toss out

Thank you for such a beautifully crafted metaphor with the old chair. It really does capture the lingering presence of grief so well, the way it hides in the corners of our mind, waiting for a moment to resurface. I love the way you described learning to control how often we sit there, even if we can’t completely get rid of it. It’s such a powerful and comforting way to think about grief and its place in our lives. Your words give me hope and perspective. I’ll hold on to that image for a long time.

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